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Transcript of 1 The American Indian/Alaska Native National Resource Center for Substance Abuse and Mental Health...
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The American Indian/Alaska Native National Resource Center for Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Making Best Practices Work in Native Communities
Anchorage, AlaskaMay 5-6, 2005
Dale Walker, MD Patricia Silk Walker, PhD Douglas Bigelow, PhD
Bentson McFarland, MD, PhD Elizabeth Hawkins, MPH, PhD Laura Loudon, MS
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For information, contact us at
503-494-3703
Dale Walker, MD
Or visit our website:
www.oneskycenter.org
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Overview
• An Environmental Scan• Behavioral Health Care Issues• Fragmentation and Integration• Introduction to One Sky Center• Best Practice = Evidence-Based + Indigenous
Knowledge
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Health Problems
1. Alcoholism 6X
2. Tuberculosis 6X
3. Diabetes 3.5 X
4. Accidents 3X
5. Physicians 72/100,000 (US 242)
6. 60% Over 65 live in poverty (US 27%)
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American Indians
• Have same health disorders as general population
• Greater prevalence• Greater severity• Much less access to Tx• Cultural relevance more challenging• Social context disintegrated
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Agencies Involved in B.H. Delivery
1. Indian Health Service (IHS)A. Mental HealthB. Primary HealthC. Alcoholism / Substance Abuse
2. Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)A. EducationB. VocationalC. Social ServicesD. Police
3. Tribal Health4. Urban Indian Health5. State and Local Agencies6. Federal Agencies: SAMHSA, VAMC
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Disconnect Amongst Addictions, Mental
Health, and Medicine
• Professionals are undertrained in the other two domains
• Patients are underdiagnosed• Patients are undertreated• These systems do not integrate well with
social services
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Difficulties of Program Integration
• Separate funding streams and coverage gaps• Agency turf issues• Different treatment philosophies• Different training philosophies• Lack of resources• Poor cross training• Consumer and family barriers
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How are we functioning?(Carl Bell, 7/03)
One size fits allOne size fits all
Different goals Different goals Resource silosResource silos
Activity-drivenActivity-driven
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We need Synergy and an Integrated System (Carl Bell, 7/03)
Culturally specific
Culturally specific
Evidence based
Evidence based
Integratingresources
Integratingresources
Outcome driven
Outcome driven
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Education
Consultation Excellence
Opportunity
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Program Goals
• Promote and nurture effective and culturally appropriate prevention, treatment, and mental health services
• Identify and disseminate evidence-based prevention, treatment, and mental health practices
• Provide training and technical assistance
• Help to expand capacity
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Jack Brown Adolescent Treatment Center
Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium
United American Indian Involvement
Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board
Eastern U.S. Tribal Consortium
Tribal Colleges and Universities
One Sky Center
National Indian Youth Leadership Project
One Sky Center Partners
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Projects
• Review SAMHSA portfolio: 134 projects• Mental health liaison – SAMHSA/ IHS• Medicaid, state, Indian funding• Best practices consensus project• National traffic safety – drivers training• Suicide and substance abuse• Suicide prevention• Training and education
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Indigenous Knowledge
• Is local knowledge unique to a given culture or society; it has its own theory, philosophy, scientific and logical validity, which is used as a basis for decision-making for all of life’s needs.
Definitions:
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Traditional Medicine
• The sum total of health knowledge, skills and practices based upon theories, beliefs and experiences indigenous to different cultures…used in the maintenance of health.
WHO 2002
Definitions:
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Evidence-based Practices
• Interventions that show consistent scientific evidence of improving a person’s outcome of treatment and/or prevention in controlled settings.
SAMHSA 2003
Definitions:
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Best Practices
• Examples and cases that illustrate the use of community knowledge and science in developing cost effective and sustainable survival strategies to overcome a chronic illness.
WHO 2002
Definitions:
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World Conference on Science
• Recommended that scientific and indigenous knowledge be integrated in interdisciplinary projects dealing with culture, environment and chronic illness.
1999
Evidence based + community knowledge = best practice
A partnership begins!
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ID Best Practice
Best Practice
Clinical/servicesResearch
TraditionalHealing
MainstreamPractice
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Circle of Care
Best Practices
Child & Adolescent Programs
Prevention Programs
Primary Care
EmergencyRooms
TraditionalHealers
A&D Programs
Colleges & Universities
Boarding Schools
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Effective Interventions for Adults
• Cognitive/Behavioral Approaches• Motivational Interventions• Psychopharmacological Interventions• Modified Therapeutic Communities• Assertive Community Treatment• Vocational Services• Dual Recovery/Self-Help Programs• Consumer Involvement• Therapeutic Relationships
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Effective Interventions for Youth
• Family Therapy
• Case Management
• Therapeutic Communities
• Community Reinforcement
• Circles of Care
• Motivational Enhancement
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Community Mobilization: What makes a partnership
work?• Trust – do away with stereotypes• Real participation at all levels• Build in incentives for all stakeholders• Education and training of all stakeholders• Dissemination of knowledge• Enhanced communication• Social to scientific interaction
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Partnered Collaboration
Research-Education-Treatment
Grassroots Groups
Community-BasedOrganizations
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