(1) The legislature finds that the children's mental health work group established in chapter 96, Laws of 2016 reported recommendations related to increasing access to mental health services for children and youth and that many of those recommendations were adopted by the 2017 and 2018 legislatures. The legislature further finds that additional work is needed to improve mental health support for children and families and that the children's mental health work group was reestablished for this purpose in chapter 175, Laws of 2018.
(2) The legislature finds that there is a workforce shortage of behavioral health professionals and that increasing medicaid rates to a level that is equal to medicare rates will increase the number of providers who will serve children and families on medicaid. Further, the legislature finds that there is a need to increase the cultural and linguistic diversity among children's behavioral health professionals and that hiring practices, professional training, and high-quality translations of accreditation and licensing exams should be implemented to incentivize this diversity in the workforce.
(3) Therefore, the legislature intends to implement the recommendations adopted by the children's mental health work group in January 2019, in order to improve mental health care access for children and their families.
(1) Each educational service district must provide to the school districts in its region behavioral health coordination that, at a minimum, includes:
(a) Providing support for school district development and implementation of plans for recognition, initial screening, and response to emotional or behavioral distress in students as required under RCW 28A.320.127;
(b) Facilitating partnerships and coordination between school districts, public schools, and existing regional and local systems of behavioral health care services and supports in order to increase student and family access to these services and supports;
(c) Assisting school districts and public schools in building capacity to identify and support students in need of behavioral health care services and to link students and families with community-based behavioral health care services;
(d) Identifying, sharing, and integrating, to the extent practicable, behavioral and physical health care service delivery models;
(e) Providing medicaid billing related training, technical assistance, and coordination between school districts;
(f) Guidance in implementing best practices in response to, and to recover from, the suicide or attempted suicide of a student; and
(g) Providing technical assistance to schools and school districts in implementing or expanding social emotional learning programs.
(2) Funds appropriated pursuant to this section must be used solely for the purposes outlined in this section.
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, beginning July 1, 2019, the health care authority shall collaborate with the University of Washington department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, Seattle children's hospital, and the office of the superintendent of public instruction, to develop a plan to implement a two-year pilot program called the partnership access line for schools.
(2) The pilot program must be implemented by January 1, 2020, and shall support two educational service districts selected by the office of the superintendent of public instruction.
(3) Elements of the pilot program must include:
(a) Developing a general behavioral health support curriculum appropriate for the roles of school staff;
(b) Delivering behavioral health trainings for school counselors, social workers, psychologists, nurses, teachers, and administrators with content designed specifically for these roles;
(c) Providing school staff who have participated in training under this section access to telephone consultation with psychologists and psychiatrists to support school staff in managing children with challenging behaviors; and
(d) Providing timely crisis management appointments, delivered in person or through interactive audio and video technology, between partnership access line clinical staff and school staff when assessed as clinically appropriate by the partnership access line and when similar support is not immediately available in the local community.
(4) By December 1, 2022, the health care authority shall submit a report to the governor and the legislature describing the services delivered through the pilot program and recommending whether the pilot program should continue or be made permanent.
(5) This section expires December 30, 2022.
(1) Beginning in the 2019-20 school year, school districts must use one of the professional learning days funded under RCW 28A.150.415 to train school district staff in mental health first aid, suicide prevention, social-emotional learning, trauma-informed care, and antibullying strategies.
(2) Funds appropriated pursuant to this section must be used solely for the purposes outlined in this section.
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the office of the superintendent of public instruction shall identify and make available to school districts mental health literacy and healthy relationships instructional materials that are consistent with Washington's health and physical education K-12 learning standards.
(2) The office of the superintendent of public instruction shall include in health and physical education graduation requirements all social-emotional health, substance use and abuse, and healthy relationship standards adopted in rule by the superintendent.
Subject to availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the University of Washington shall establish certificate programs in evidence-based practices for behavioral health care professionals as follows:
(1)(a) The University of Washington school of social work, in collaboration with the University of Washington department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, schools of social work programs across the state, and community behavioral health agencies, shall establish a certificate program in evidence-based practices that have been shown to be effective in treating adolescents and young adults with mental health disorders and suicidal behavior, including:
(i) Dialectical behavior therapy; and
(ii) Wraparound.
(b) The certificate program must be designed:
(i) For graduate students pursuing a master of social work degree; and
(ii) To offer stipends, scholarships, and loans to students and to employees of participating public behavioral health agencies that participate in order to retain a trained workforce.
(2)(a) The University of Washington department of psychology, in collaboration with the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, school of social work, and continuum college, shall establish a certificate program in evidence-based practices that have been shown to be effective in treating adolescents and young adults with mental health disorders, including:
(i) Evidence-based parenting interventions;
(ii) Evidence-based treatments for anxiety and mood disorders; and
(iii) Trauma-focused cognitive behavior therapy.
(b) The certificate program must be designed for licensed behavioral health care professionals, and mental health professionals as defined in RCW 71.05.020, who wish to receive additional education in evidence-based practices.
(3) Participants in the certificate programs under this section are eligible to apply for the health professional loan repayment and scholarship program under chapter 28B.115 RCW.
Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the child and adolescent psychiatry residency program at the University of Washington shall offer
Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, Washington State University shall offer
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the authority shall collaborate with the University of Washington and a professional association of licensed community behavioral health agencies to develop a statewide plan to implement evidence-based coordinated specialty care programs that provide early identification and intervention for psychosis in licensed and certified community behavioral health agencies. The authority must submit the statewide plan to the governor and the legislature by March 1, 2020. The statewide plan must include:
(a) Analysis of existing benefit packages, payment rates, and resource gaps, including needs for nonmedicaid resources;
(b) Development of a discrete benefit package and case rate for coordinated specialty care;
(c) Identification of costs for statewide start-up, training, and community outreach;
(d) Determination of the number of coordinated specialty care teams needed in each regional service area; and
(e) A timeline for statewide implementation.
(2) The authority shall ensure that:
(a) At least one coordinated specialty care team is starting up or in operation in each regional service area by October 1, 2020; and
(b) Each regional service area has an adequate number of coordinated specialty care teams based on incidence and population across the state by December 31, 2023.
(3) This section expires June 30, 2024.
(1) Subject to amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the office of the superintendent of public instruction and the University of Washington school mental health assessment, research, and training center shall jointly convene a work group of educators and researchers to develop a statewide multitiered system of school supports that includes academic, social-emotional, and behavioral supports. The work group must include representatives of: Public K-12 schools; school districts; educational service districts; the office of the superintendent of public instruction; families of K-12 students; the department of children, youth, and families; and public universities. The office of the superintendent of public instruction and the University of Washington school mental health assessment, research, and training center must submit the findings and recommendations of the work group to the governor and the legislature by November 1, 2020.
(2) This section expires December 31, 2020.
(1)
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the department of children, youth, and families must implement a trauma-informed early care and education pilot in at least two regions. The pilot must begin by January 1, 2020, and conclude by December 1, 2021, and must:
(a) Implement a model for professional development in trauma-informed care for child care and early learning providers;
(b) Provide additional targeted social and emotional supports beyond what is typically provided in child care and early learning settings, including health and infant and early childhood mental health consultation;
(c) Establish communities of practice for family home child care providers to receive trauma-informed training and coaching, reflective supervision and consultation, and peer-to-peer mentoring and support;
(d) Establish enhanced trauma-informed early care and education sites that must receive increased subsidy rates and supports to enable the provision of a more intensive level of care that includes trauma-informed family engagement and smaller teacher-child ratios than what is required in the department of children, youth, and families' licensing rules;
(e) Implement trauma-informed practices in early achievers coaching and data collection; and
(f) Establish a system for tracking expulsions from child care and early learning settings.
(2) By December 1, 2021, the department of children, youth, and families must submit a report to the governor and the appropriate committees of the legislature describing the results of the pilot and recommending whether to continue the pilot or make it permanent.
(3) This section expires December 31, 2021.
Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the health care authority must provide an online training for behavioral health providers regarding state law and best practices when providing behavioral health services to children, youth, and families. The training must be free for providers and must include information related to parent-initiated treatment, minor-initiated treatment, and other treatment services provided under this chapter.
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the authority must conduct an annual survey of a sample group of parents, youth, and behavioral health providers to measure the impacts of implementing policies resulting from the enactment of chapter . . . (House Bill No. 1874), Laws of 2019 (including any later amendments or substitutes) during the first three years of implementation. The first survey must be complete by July 1, 2020, followed by subsequent annual surveys completed by July 1, 2021, and by July 1, 2022. The authority must report on the results of the surveys annually to the governor and the legislature beginning November 1, 2020. The final report is due November 1, 2022, and must include any recommendations for statutory changes identified as needed based on survey results.
(2) This section expires December 31, 2022.