Passed by the Senate April 28, 2013 YEAS 47   BRAD OWEN ________________________________________ President of the Senate Passed by the House April 24, 2013 YEAS 94   FRANK CHOPP ________________________________________ Speaker of the House of Representatives | I, Hunter G. Goodman, Secretary of the Senate of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is SECOND SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL 5732 as passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives on the dates hereon set forth. HUNTER G. GOODMAN ________________________________________ Secretary | |
Approved May 21, 2013, 3:05 p.m. JAY INSLEE ________________________________________ Governor of the State of Washington | May 21, 2013 Secretary of State State of Washington |
State of Washington | 63rd Legislature | 2013 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 03/01/13.
AN ACT Relating to improving behavioral health services provided to adults in Washington state; amending RCW 71.24.025 and 18.19.210; adding new sections to chapter 43.20A RCW; adding a new section to chapter 70.97 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 71.05 RCW; creating a new section; providing an effective date; and providing an expiration date.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 (1)(a) Beginning May 1, 2014, the
legislature shall convene a task force to examine reform of the adult
behavioral health system, with voting members as provided in this
subsection.
(i) The president of the senate shall appoint one member from each
of the two largest caucuses of the senate.
(ii) The speaker of the house of representatives shall appoint one
member from each of the two largest caucuses in the house of
representatives.
(iii) The governor shall appoint five members consisting of the
secretary of the department of social and health services or the
secretary's designee, the director of the health care authority or the
director's designee, the director of the office of financial management
or the director's designee, the secretary of the department of
corrections or the secretary's designee, and a representative of the
governor.
(iv) The governor shall request participation by a representative
of tribal governments.
(b) The task force shall choose two cochairs from among its
legislative members.
(c) The task force shall adopt a bottom-up approach and welcome
input and participation from all stakeholders interested in the
improvement of the adult behavioral health system. To that end, the
task force must invite participation from, at a minimum, the following:
Behavioral health service recipients and their families; local
government; representatives of regional support networks;
representatives of county coordinators; law enforcement; city and
county jails; tribal representatives; behavioral health service
providers; housing providers; labor representatives; counties with
state hospitals; mental health advocates; public defenders with
involuntary mental health commitment or mental health court experience;
medicaid managed care plan representatives; long-term care service
providers; the Washington state hospital association; and individuals
with expertise in evidence-based and research-based behavioral health
service practices. Leadership of subcommittees formed by the task
force may be drawn from this body of invited participants.
(2) The task force shall undertake a systemwide review of the adult
behavioral health system and make recommendations for reform
concerning, but not limited to, the following:
(a) The means by which services are delivered for adults with
mental illness and chemical dependency disorders;
(b) Availability of effective means to promote recovery and prevent
harm associated with mental illness;
(c) Crisis services, including boarding of mental health patients
outside of regularly certified treatment beds;
(d) Best practices for cross-system collaboration between
behavioral health treatment providers, medical care providers, long-term care service providers, entities providing health home services to
high-risk medicaid clients, law enforcement, and criminal justice
agencies; and
(e) Public safety practices involving persons with mental illness
with forensic involvement.
(3) Staff support for the task force must be provided by the senate
committee services and the house of representatives office of program
research.
(4) Legislative members of the task force must be reimbursed for
travel expenses in accordance with RCW 44.04.120. Nonlegislative
members, except those representing an employer or organization, are
entitled to be reimbursed for travel expenses in accordance with RCW
43.03.050 and 43.03.060.
(5) The expenses of the task force must be paid jointly by the
senate and house of representatives. Task force expenditures are
subject to approval by the senate facilities and operations committee
and the house of representatives executive rules committee, or their
successor committees.
(6) The task force shall report its findings and recommendations to
the governor and the appropriate committees of the legislature by
January 1, 2015.
(7) This section expires June 1, 2015.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 A new section is added to chapter 43.20A RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The systems responsible for financing, administration, and
delivery of publicly funded mental health and chemical dependency
services to adults must be designed and administered to achieve
improved outcomes for adult clients served by those systems through
increased use and development of evidence-based, research-based, and
promising practices, as defined in RCW 71.24.025. For purposes of this
section, client outcomes include: Improved health status; increased
participation in employment and education; reduced involvement with the
criminal justice system; enhanced safety and access to treatment for
forensic patients; reduction in avoidable utilization of and costs
associated with hospital, emergency room, and crisis services;
increased housing stability; improved quality of life, including
measures of recovery and resilience; and decreased population level
disparities in access to treatment and treatment outcomes.
(2) The department and the health care authority must implement a
strategy for the improvement of the adult behavioral health system.
(a) The department must establish a steering committee that
includes at least the following members: Behavioral health service
recipients and their families; local government; representatives of
regional support networks; representatives of county coordinators; law
enforcement; city and county jails; tribal representatives; behavioral
health service providers, including at least one chemical dependency
provider and at least one psychiatric advanced registered nurse
practitioner; housing providers; medicaid managed care plan
representatives; long-term care service providers; organizations
representing health care professionals providing services in mental
health settings; the Washington state hospital association; the
Washington state medical association; individuals with expertise in
evidence-based and research-based behavioral health service practices;
and the health care authority.
(b) The adult behavioral health system improvement strategy must
include:
(i) An assessment of the capacity of the current publicly funded
behavioral health services system to provide evidence-based, research-based, and promising practices;
(ii) Identification, development, and increased use of evidence-based, research-based, and promising practices;
(iii) Design and implementation of a transparent quality management
system, including analysis of current system capacity to implement
outcomes reporting and development of baseline and improvement targets
for each outcome measure provided in this section;
(iv) Identification and phased implementation of service delivery,
financing, or other strategies that will promote improvement of the
behavioral health system as described in this section and incentivize
the medical care, behavioral health, and long-term care service
delivery systems to achieve the improvements described in this section
and collaborate across systems. The strategies must include phased
implementation of public reporting of outcome and performance measures
in a form that allows for comparison of performance and levels of
improvement between geographic regions of Washington; and
(v) Identification of effective methods for promoting workforce
capacity, efficiency, stability, diversity, and safety.
(c) The department must seek private foundation and federal grant
funding to support the adult behavioral health system improvement
strategy.
(d) By May 15, 2014, the Washington state institute for public
policy, in consultation with the department, the University of
Washington evidence-based practice institute, the University of
Washington alcohol and drug abuse institute, and the Washington
institute for mental health research and training, shall prepare an
inventory of evidence-based, research-based, and promising practices
for prevention and intervention services pursuant to subsection (1) of
this section. The department shall use the inventory in preparing the
behavioral health improvement strategy. The department shall provide
the institute with data necessary to complete the inventory.
(e) By August 1, 2014, the department must report to the governor
and the relevant fiscal and policy committees of the legislature on the
status of implementation of the behavioral health improvement strategy,
including strategies developed or implemented to date, timelines, and
costs to accomplish phased implementation of the adult behavioral
health system improvement strategy.
(3) The department must contract for the services of an independent
consultant to review the provision of forensic mental health services
in Washington state and provide recommendations as to whether and how
the state's forensic mental health system should be modified to provide
an appropriate treatment environment for individuals with mental
disorders who have been charged with a crime while enhancing the safety
and security of the public and other patients and staff at forensic
treatment facilities. By August 1, 2014, the department must submit a
report regarding the recommendations of the independent consultant to
the governor and the relevant fiscal and policy committees of the
legislature.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 A new section is added to chapter 70.97 RCW
to read as follows:
To the extent that funds are specifically appropriated for this
purpose, the department must issue a request for a proposal for
enhanced services facility services by June 1, 2014, and complete the
procurement process by January 1, 2015.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 A new section is added to chapter 71.05 RCW
to read as follows:
When a person has been involuntarily committed for treatment to a
hospital for a period of ninety or one hundred eighty days, and the
superintendent or professional person in charge of the hospital
determines that the person no longer requires active psychiatric
treatment at an inpatient level of care, the regional support network
responsible for resource management services for the person must work
with the hospital to develop an individualized discharge plan and
arrange for a transition to the community in accordance with the
person's individualized discharge plan within twenty-one days of the
determination.
Sec. 5 RCW 71.24.025 and 2012 c 10 s 59 are each amended to read
as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in
this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1) "Acutely mentally ill" means a condition which is limited to a
short-term severe crisis episode of:
(a) A mental disorder as defined in RCW 71.05.020 or, in the case
of a child, as defined in RCW 71.34.020;
(b) Being gravely disabled as defined in RCW 71.05.020 or, in the
case of a child, a gravely disabled minor as defined in RCW 71.34.020;
or
(c) Presenting a likelihood of serious harm as defined in RCW
71.05.020 or, in the case of a child, as defined in RCW 71.34.020.
(2) "Available resources" means funds appropriated for the purpose
of providing community mental health programs, federal funds, except
those provided according to Title XIX of the Social Security Act, and
state funds appropriated under this chapter or chapter 71.05 RCW by the
legislature during any biennium for the purpose of providing
residential services, resource management services, community support
services, and other mental health services. This does not include
funds appropriated for the purpose of operating and administering the
state psychiatric hospitals.
(3) "Child" means a person under the age of eighteen years.
(4) "Chronically mentally ill adult" or "adult who is chronically
mentally ill" means an adult who has a mental disorder and meets at
least one of the following criteria:
(a) Has undergone two or more episodes of hospital care for a
mental disorder within the preceding two years; or
(b) Has experienced a continuous psychiatric hospitalization or
residential treatment exceeding six months' duration within the
preceding year; or
(c) Has been unable to engage in any substantial gainful activity
by reason of any mental disorder which has lasted for a continuous
period of not less than twelve months. "Substantial gainful activity"
shall be defined by the department by rule consistent with Public Law
92-603, as amended.
(5) "Clubhouse" means a community-based program that provides
rehabilitation services and is certified by the department of social
and health services.
(6) "Community mental health program" means all mental health
services, activities, or programs using available resources.
(7) "Community mental health service delivery system" means public
or private agencies that provide services specifically to persons with
mental disorders as defined under RCW 71.05.020 and receive funding
from public sources.
(8) "Community support services" means services authorized,
planned, and coordinated through resource management services
including, at a minimum, assessment, diagnosis, emergency crisis
intervention available twenty-four hours, seven days a week,
prescreening determinations for persons who are mentally ill being
considered for placement in nursing homes as required by federal law,
screening for patients being considered for admission to residential
services, diagnosis and treatment for children who are acutely mentally
ill or severely emotionally disturbed discovered under screening
through the federal Title XIX early and periodic screening, diagnosis,
and treatment program, investigation, legal, and other nonresidential
services under chapter 71.05 RCW, case management services, psychiatric
treatment including medication supervision, counseling, psychotherapy,
assuring transfer of relevant patient information between service
providers, recovery services, and other services determined by regional
support networks.
(9) "Consensus-based" means a program or practice that has general
support among treatment providers and experts, based on experience or
professional literature, and may have anecdotal or case study support,
or that is agreed but not possible to perform studies with random
assignment and controlled groups.
(10) "County authority" means the board of county commissioners,
county council, or county executive having authority to establish a
community mental health program, or two or more of the county
authorities specified in this subsection which have entered into an
agreement to provide a community mental health program.
(11) "Department" means the department of social and health
services.
(12) "Designated mental health professional" means a mental health
professional designated by the county or other authority authorized in
rule to perform the duties specified in this chapter.
(13) "Emerging best practice" or "promising practice" means a
((practice that presents, based on preliminary information, potential
for becoming a research-based or consensus-based practice)) program or
practice that, based on statistical analyses or a well established
theory of change, shows potential for meeting the evidence-based or
research-based criteria, which may include the use of a program that is
evidence-based for outcomes other than those listed in subsection (14)
of this section.
(14) "Evidence-based" means a program or practice that has ((had
multiple site random controlled trials across heterogeneous populations
demonstrating that the program or practice is effective for the
population)) been tested in heterogeneous or intended populations with
multiple randomized, or statistically controlled evaluations, or both;
or one large multiple site randomized, or statistically controlled
evaluation, or both, where the weight of the evidence from a systemic
review demonstrates sustained improvements in at least one outcome.
"Evidence-based" also means a program or practice that can be
implemented with a set of procedures to allow successful replication in
Washington and, when possible, is determined to be cost-beneficial.
(15) "Licensed service provider" means an entity licensed according
to this chapter or chapter 71.05 RCW or an entity deemed to meet state
minimum standards as a result of accreditation by a recognized
behavioral health accrediting body recognized and having a current
agreement with the department, that meets state minimum standards or
persons licensed under chapter 18.57, 18.71, 18.83, or 18.79 RCW, as it
applies to registered nurses and advanced registered nurse
practitioners.
(16) "Long-term inpatient care" means inpatient services for
persons committed for, or voluntarily receiving intensive treatment
for, periods of ninety days or greater under chapter 71.05 RCW. "Long-term inpatient care" as used in this chapter does not include: (a)
Services for individuals committed under chapter 71.05 RCW who are
receiving services pursuant to a conditional release or a court-ordered
less restrictive alternative to detention; or (b) services for
individuals voluntarily receiving less restrictive alternative
treatment on the grounds of the state hospital.
(17) "Mental health services" means all services provided by
regional support networks and other services provided by the state for
persons who are mentally ill.
(18) "Mentally ill persons," "persons who are mentally ill," and
"the mentally ill" mean persons and conditions defined in subsections
(1), (4), (27), and (28) of this section.
(19) "Recovery" means the process in which people are able to live,
work, learn, and participate fully in their communities.
(20) "Regional support network" means a county authority or group
of county authorities or other entity recognized by the secretary in
contract in a defined region.
(21) "Registration records" include all the records of the
department, regional support networks, treatment facilities, and other
persons providing services to the department, county departments, or
facilities which identify persons who are receiving or who at any time
have received services for mental illness.
(22) "Research-based" means a program or practice that has ((some
research demonstrating effectiveness, but that does not yet meet the
standard of evidence-based practices)) been tested with a single
randomized, or statistically controlled evaluation, or both,
demonstrating sustained desirable outcomes; or where the weight of the
evidence from a systemic review supports sustained outcomes as
described in subsection (14) of this section but does not meet the full
criteria for evidence-based.
(23) "Residential services" means a complete range of residences
and supports authorized by resource management services and which may
involve a facility, a distinct part thereof, or services which support
community living, for persons who are acutely mentally ill, adults who
are chronically mentally ill, children who are severely emotionally
disturbed, or adults who are seriously disturbed and determined by the
regional support network to be at risk of becoming acutely or
chronically mentally ill. The services shall include at least
evaluation and treatment services as defined in chapter 71.05 RCW,
acute crisis respite care, long-term adaptive and rehabilitative care,
and supervised and supported living services, and shall also include
any residential services developed to service persons who are mentally
ill in nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and adult family
homes, and may include outpatient services provided as an element in a
package of services in a supported housing model. Residential services
for children in out-of-home placements related to their mental disorder
shall not include the costs of food and shelter, except for children's
long-term residential facilities existing prior to January 1, 1991.
(24) "Resilience" means the personal and community qualities that
enable individuals to rebound from adversity, trauma, tragedy, threats,
or other stresses, and to live productive lives.
(25) "Resource management services" mean the planning,
coordination, and authorization of residential services and community
support services administered pursuant to an individual service plan
for: (a) Adults and children who are acutely mentally ill; (b) adults
who are chronically mentally ill; (c) children who are severely
emotionally disturbed; or (d) adults who are seriously disturbed and
determined solely by a regional support network to be at risk of
becoming acutely or chronically mentally ill. Such planning,
coordination, and authorization shall include mental health screening
for children eligible under the federal Title XIX early and periodic
screening, diagnosis, and treatment program. Resource management
services include seven day a week, twenty-four hour a day availability
of information regarding enrollment of adults and children who are
mentally ill in services and their individual service plan to
designated mental health professionals, evaluation and treatment
facilities, and others as determined by the regional support network.
(26) "Secretary" means the secretary of social and health services.
(27) "Seriously disturbed person" means a person who:
(a) Is gravely disabled or presents a likelihood of serious harm to
himself or herself or others, or to the property of others, as a result
of a mental disorder as defined in chapter 71.05 RCW;
(b) Has been on conditional release status, or under a less
restrictive alternative order, at some time during the preceding two
years from an evaluation and treatment facility or a state mental
health hospital;
(c) Has a mental disorder which causes major impairment in several
areas of daily living;
(d) Exhibits suicidal preoccupation or attempts; or
(e) Is a child diagnosed by a mental health professional, as
defined in chapter 71.34 RCW, as experiencing a mental disorder which
is clearly interfering with the child's functioning in family or school
or with peers or is clearly interfering with the child's personality
development and learning.
(28) "Severely emotionally disturbed child" or "child who is
severely emotionally disturbed" means a child who has been determined
by the regional support network to be experiencing a mental disorder as
defined in chapter 71.34 RCW, including those mental disorders that
result in a behavioral or conduct disorder, that is clearly interfering
with the child's functioning in family or school or with peers and who
meets at least one of the following criteria:
(a) Has undergone inpatient treatment or placement outside of the
home related to a mental disorder within the last two years;
(b) Has undergone involuntary treatment under chapter 71.34 RCW
within the last two years;
(c) Is currently served by at least one of the following child-serving systems: Juvenile justice, child-protection/welfare, special
education, or developmental disabilities;
(d) Is at risk of escalating maladjustment due to:
(i) Chronic family dysfunction involving a caretaker who is
mentally ill or inadequate;
(ii) Changes in custodial adult;
(iii) Going to, residing in, or returning from any placement
outside of the home, for example, psychiatric hospital, short-term
inpatient, residential treatment, group or foster home, or a
correctional facility;
(iv) Subject to repeated physical abuse or neglect;
(v) Drug or alcohol abuse; or
(vi) Homelessness.
(29) "State minimum standards" means minimum requirements
established by rules adopted by the secretary and necessary to
implement this chapter for: (a) Delivery of mental health services;
(b) licensed service providers for the provision of mental health
services; (c) residential services; and (d) community support services
and resource management services.
(30) "Treatment records" include registration and all other records
concerning persons who are receiving or who at any time have received
services for mental illness, which are maintained by the department, by
regional support networks and their staffs, and by treatment
facilities. Treatment records do not include notes or records
maintained for personal use by a person providing treatment services
for the department, regional support networks, or a treatment facility
if the notes or records are not available to others.
(31) "Tribal authority," for the purposes of this section and RCW
71.24.300 only, means: The federally recognized Indian tribes and the
major Indian organizations recognized by the secretary insofar as these
organizations do not have a financial relationship with any regional
support network that would present a conflict of interest.
Sec. 6 RCW 18.19.210 and 2008 c 135 s 9 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1)(a) An applicant for registration as an agency affiliated
counselor who applies to the department within seven days of employment
by an agency may work as an agency affiliated counselor for up to sixty
days while the application is processed. The applicant must stop
working on the sixtieth day of employment if the registration has not
been granted for any reason.
(b) The applicant may not provide unsupervised counseling prior to
completion of a criminal background check performed by either the
employer or the secretary. For purposes of this subsection,
"unsupervised" means the supervisor is not physically present at the
location where the counseling occurs.
(2) Agency affiliated counselors shall notify the department if
they are either no longer employed by the agency identified on their
application or are now employed with another agency, or both. Agency
affiliated counselors may not engage in the practice of counseling
unless they are currently affiliated with an agency.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 7 A new section is added to chapter 43.20A RCW
to read as follows:
(1) By November 30, 2013, the department and the health care
authority must report to the governor and the relevant fiscal and
policy committees of the legislature, consistent with RCW 43.01.036, a
plan that establishes a tribal-centric behavioral health system
incorporating both mental health and chemical dependency services. The
plan must assure that child, adult, and older adult American Indians
and Alaskan Natives eligible for medicaid have increased access to
culturally appropriate mental health and chemical dependency services.
The plan must:
(a) Include implementation dates, major milestones, and fiscal
estimates as needed;
(b) Emphasize the use of culturally appropriate evidence-based and
promising practices;
(c) Address equitable access to crisis services, outpatient care,
voluntary and involuntary hospitalization, and behavioral health care
coordination;
(d) Identify statutory changes necessary to implement the tribal-centric behavioral health system; and
(e) Be developed with the department's Indian policy advisory
committee and the American Indian health commission, in consultation
with Washington's federally recognized tribes.
(2) The department shall enter into agreements with the tribes and
urban Indian health programs and modify regional support network
contracts as necessary to develop a tribal-centric behavioral health
system that better serves the needs of the tribes.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 8 Section 4 of this act takes effect July 1,
2018.