Behavioral Health Crisis Services. Crisis mental health services are intended to stabilize a person in crisis to prevent further deterioration, provide immediate treatment and intervention, and provide treatment services in the least restrictive environment available. Substance use disorder detoxification services are provided to persons to assist with the safe and effective withdrawal from substances. Behavioral health crisis services include crisis telephone support, crisis outreach services, crisis stabilization services, crisis peer support services, withdrawal management services, and emergency involuntary detention services.
Behavioral health administrative services organizations (BH-ASOs) are entities contracted with the Health Care Authority to administer certain behavioral health services and programs for all individuals within a regional service area, including behavioral health crisis services and the administration of the Involuntary Treatment Act. Each BH-ASO must maintain a behavioral health crisis hotline for its region.
National Suicide Prevention Hotline. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) partially funds the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (Lifeline). Lifeline is a national network of about 180 crisis centers linked by a single toll-free number, available to people in suicidal crisis or emotional distress. When a person calls the number, the call is routed to a local crisis center based upon the caller's area code. Counselors at the local crisis center assess callers for suicidal risk, provide crisis counseling services and crisis intervention, engage emergency services when necessary, and offer referrals to behavioral health services. SAMHSA and the Department of Veterans Affairs have established the Veterans Crisis Line which links veterans with suicide prevention coordinators. In Washington, there are currently three local crisis centers participating in Lifeline.
In October 2020, Congress passed the National Suicide Hotline Designation Act of 2020 (act). The act designates the number 988 as the universal telephone number within the United States for accessing the National Suicide Prevention and Mental Health Crisis Hotline system maintained by Lifeline and the Veterans Crisis Line. The act expressly authorizes states to collect a fee on commercial mobile services or Internet protocol-enabled voice services for ensuring the efficient and effective routing of calls made to the 988 National Suicide Prevention and Mental Health Crisis Hotline to an appropriate crisis center; and personnel and the provision of acute mental health crisis outreach and stabilization services by directly responding to calls to the crisis centers.
The Health Care Authority (HCA) must collaborate with the Department of Health (DOH) to establish state crisis call center hubs and an enhanced crisis response system. DOH must take primary responsibility for designating crisis call center hubs. HCA must take primary responsibility to develop the crisis system and support the work of the crisis call center hubs.
DOH, in collaboration with HCA, must:
HCA must develop guidelines to appropriately serve high-risk populations for crisis response. These guidelines must be designed to promote behavioral health equity with regard to race, ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status, sexual orientation, and geographic location, including training requirements and procedures to provide linguistically and culturally competent care.Crisis call center hubs must:
Crisis Response Improvement Strategy Committee. The Office of Financial Management must contract with the Behavioral Health Institute at Harborview Medical Center to staff and facilitate a Crisis Response Improvement Strategy Committee (CRIS) for the purpose of developing an integrated behavioral health crisis response system. CRIS must have 36 members appointed or requested by HCA representing specified groups, including four legislative members appointed by their respective caucuses. CRIS must have a steering committee consisting of six specified members, which shall convene meetings, set agendas, form subcommittees, and choose three co-chairs for CRIS from among their members. CRIS must be open to public testimony, develop a comprehensive assessment of the behavioral health system including identification of goals and outcome measures, and develop recommendations to be reported to the Governor and Legislature by January 1, 2022, and January 1, 2023, in many areas, including:
Annual Report. DOH and HCA must provide an annual report of the 988 crisis hotline usage, call outcomes, and crisis services staring in November 2023.
988 Behavioral Health Crisis Response Line Tax. A tax is imposed on radio access lines, voice over Internet protocol service lines, and switched access lines purchased or subscribed to by state residents of $0.30 per line per month beginning October 1, 2021, and increasing to $0.50 on January 1, 2023. Collection and penalty provisions are provided. Proceeds must be deposited in a Statewide 988 Behavioral Health Crisis Response Line Account. Expenditures from the account must be used to ensure the effective routing of 988 crisis hotline calls and for personnel and services provided directly in response to 988 calls. Moneys from the account may not be used to supplant general fund appropriations for behavioral health services or for Medicaid-covered services provided to Medicaid enrollees.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: One in four police shootings involve people with behavioral health disorders. Our state has a higher rate of suicide than the national average, with a 36 percent increase in suicides over the last decade. Suicides are higher for veterans, American Indians and Alaska Natives, LGBTQ youth, and for people living in rural areas. With 988 we can create a responsive, robust, caring system that will save lives. We are trying to right size between the skills needed, costs, and demands. We live in a great innovation state and we need to invest in the technology. My husband died because of stigma. It is very important to pay crisis system workers a living wage, and embed peers deeply in the system. Crisis centers are pivotal. This will help develop smarts in the community about access to care. Our system is broken and it does not work. My wife never got the critical care she needed. She was evaluated as high risk, and still discharged with no plan, outreach, or follow up. Fixing this requires money and requires effort. The tax is necessary to sustain the system. Taxes should prioritize the needs of citizens. Folks with substance use disorders have greater needs than ever. Alcohol sales are up; addictions are increasing. This will save dollars downstream by getting people the help they need in advance. We can not talk about behavioral health without talking about racism, discrimination, and inequity. What is the value of a human life? My experience with the crisis system created layers of trauma on top of post-traumatic stress disorder. CAHOOTS is a crisis intervention that puts crisis workers in the driver's seat of crisis response. We cannot stand still. The fragmented, confusing crisis system did not serve my son, who died by suicide two years ago. The system requires profound levels of illness and yet response is slow and people are under served. We must charge forward so the 988 hotline serves as a foundation for a more functional system. There is a role for private insurance in responding to behavioral health needs. We must ensure private health insurers meet their obligations with respect to linkages to follow-up care, care coordination, and system funding. We need to work on compliance with behavioral health parity laws. Calling 911 puts a caregiver of a person with psychosis into an explosive situation. These encounters are deeply traumatic. We must stop the criminalization of mental illness and put treatment first. Emergency departments consistently fail to admit patients who should be admitted, and the result is suicide. Our crisis center works hard but people often do note get the help they need. Inadequate crisis center funding contributes to barriers accessing the crisis system. This bill has continued to improve throughout the legislative process. Behavioral health providers must be on the CRIS. We are concerned about the lack of references in the bill to designated crisis responders. We need to recruit and retain a community behavioral health workforce. A behavioral health-specific crisis response service will help everyone in our state. The difficulty of finding an outpatient behavioral health provider is really overwhelming. Making that search easier would bring enormous benefits, but will take dedicated work. The 211 system wants to be technologically interconnected with these systems. We need dedicated funding for the services, as well as the call lines. It does no good to have a 988 system that refers to nowhere.
OTHER: Thank you for the hard work and the improvements in this bill. This bill requires close collaboration, new technology, and fiscal support. This bill supports the goals in our suicide prevention plan, and will save lives. Washington has been an leader in 988. We have a planning grant and are engaging in early collaboration to lay the groundwork. We feel the urgency of this moment because the crisis system is failing so many of us. We need clear direction, vision, and funding. How will this work? We must think through the necessary components and capabilities. Single bed certifications are not real behavioral health beds. Hospitals need a seat at the table. Emergency department are the front door to crisis care. This will take all of us working together. Some requirements are so broad that they will undermine the central goal of getting 988 up and running by the required date. Health information interoperability is complex and the timeline for implementing health information exchange technology is too aggressive. The functions proposed to be funded by the 988 fee are too broad. The fee should support equipment and direct costs of taking and routing calls, including training of call center personnel. Washington wireless consumers pay 29 percent of their bills in government taxes and fees, the third highest government tax and fee burden in this country. This legislative session has been brutal on taxes—billions and billions of dollars. There are other places to get this money.