Behavioral Health Coordination within Educational Service Districts. In 2017, the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) established a competitive application process to designate two educational service districts (ESDs) to pilot one lead staff person for children's mental health and substance use disorder services. In 2019, regional school safety centers were established at each ESD. Each regional school safety center must provide behavioral health coordination to school districts including:
During the COVID-19 pandemic, ESD 101 in Spokane received non-state grant funding to hire a full-time certified mental health counselor to deliver services to children in five rural school districts in Eastern Washington using telemedicine.
Mental Health Referral Service for Children and Teens. Subject to appropriations, the Health Care Authority (HCA), in collaboration with the University of Washington Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Seattle Children's Hospital, must implement certain access lines. The Mental Health Referral Service for Children and Teens includes:
Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee Report. In 2020, the Legislature directed the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC) to evaluate the access lines including the Mental Health Referral Service for Children and Teens. According to the final report published in November 2022, 97 percent of calls to the mental health referral service were from families in Western Washington. The report states it is unclear why families in Eastern Washington are underrepresented in the referral service data.
Mental Health Professional. State law defines mental health professional to mean a psychiatrist, psychologist, physician assistant working with a supervising psychiatrist, psychiatric advanced registered nurse practitioner, psychiatric nurse, or social worker, and such other mental health professionals as may be defined by rules adopted by the Department of Health.
Grant Program. Subject to appropriations, a grant program is created within OSPI to either contract with a nonprofit organization or directly provide funding to the ESDs on an ongoing basis to provide students attending school in rural areas with access to a mental health professional using telemedicine. Priority must be given to areas where mental health services are inadequate or nonexistent and hiring an in-person mental health professional is infeasible due to geography.
Participating schools must provide students with a confidential, private location for the students to connect with the mental health professional over a high-speed Internet connection. OSPI or its contractor may provide technology to participating schools to assist in the implementation of this program.
No student may be charged a fee for using this program, but OSPI or its contractor may, to the extent feasible, recover costs for mental health professional services provided through public or private insurance held by the students to extend the reach of the program.
OSPI or its contractor must provide training to school personnel in participating schools to:
OSPI may adopt rules and procedures to implement this grant program. OSPI must annually report to the Legislature describing the utilization and results of the grant program.
Mental Health Referral Service for Children and Teens. HCA, in collaboration with the University of Washington Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Seattle Children's Hospital, must investigate the disproportionally low participation by Eastern Washington families in the Mental Health Referral Service for Children and Teens. These entities must develop a mitigation plan to remedy this disparity and report their findings and activities to the Governor and Legislature by December 1, 2023.