health services advisory committee meeting march 13, 2013
TRANSCRIPT
AgendaTopic Who What/How Time
Get some lunch! All Individual decision making 10 minutes12:00-12:10
Approval of Meeting Notes CatherineWilliams
Inform 5 minutes12:10-12:15
Announcements All Inform 15 minutes12:15-12:20
Policy and Procedure Review 8.4/8.4P SusanQuinn
InformClarify
10 minutes12:20 – 12:30
Fiscal Update 12-13 status13-14 Budget Development
Susan Quinn
InformClarify
15 minutes12:30 – 12:45
PRPP item: Environmental Scan SusanQuinnAll
PresentAnalyze/Discuss
15 minutes12:45- 1:00
PRPP item: Sustainability, Facilities, Technology
Cheryl HigginsSusan QuinnAll
PresentAnalyze/Discuss
15 minutes1:15-1:30
PRPP item: Personnel SusanQuinnAll
PresentAnalyze/Discuss
5 minutes1:30-1:45
Department Presentation: Health Promotion – PEERS Coalition- SMHP Grant
Additional ideas/collaborations
Becky Fein
All
Present
Analyze/Discuss
20 minutes1:30 – 1:5010 minutes1:50-2:00
Environmental Scan #1:The Student Experience
Student Focus Group Findings
Environmental Scan #2: The Community
Sonoma County’s Health Action Report
Community-Based Healthcare Providers
Student accepting responsibility
for meeting healthcare needs
Insurance coverage options
Student Health Services(Clinical SPS HP)
Successful, Healthy
STUDENTinsuredwith a
medical home
SRJC Student Support Services
Students will maintain and improve their health….
Potential Changes in the Demand & Delivery of SHS with the Affordable Care Act
Brings Students into SHS Moves Students out of SHSKnowledge Gap: Students may not know where to go in the community for a healthcare service they need.
Convenience: Students continue to have issues with transportation, time constraints, planning ahead.
Confidentiality: SHS Reproductive Health Clinics continues to be a gateway to contraception for very young students concerned about confidentiality, SHS is “off the grid” to insurance companies.
Fiscal: High copays for visits to their provider, trying to keep costs
Access: Community clinic (MC), doctor’s office, and/or Kaiser? appointments may require a wait time that our students aren’t satisfied with (past, present, future)
Health Insurance: • Access: Greater and faster access to referral
networks/specialty care• Fiscal: no copays for appointments, devices or
prescriptions related to reproductive health, access to expensive prescriptions (anti-depressants for example), major medical coverage, more.
• Mental health services parity with medical services, possibly greater access to mental health treatment in the community.
Medical Home in the Community: Wrap around services with access 52 weeks/yr., evenings and weekend coverage, and continuity of care.
2011 2012
SPS visits upRepro – net evenNP visits downMD visits downAthletics downDisproportionate to enrollment decreases
Health Insurance coverage increasing in young adults
Consumer Reports June 2012Ratings of health insurance policies
Estimating Insurance Costs in California
PRPP items• Sustainability
– Current practices– New ideas
• Facilities– Pending needs-Petaluma, Race, Plover
• Technology– Computer replacements (minimum 6 per year)– Software – implement EMR for SPS– Software – shift to web-hosted server/database– Integrate new technology, YouTube channel, PEERS
Coalition webpage, FaceBook, etc with District support
PRPP item
• Personnel– Re-engineering update – MH Programs
• Professional Experts• STNC Interns
– Staffing requests • Replacement College Nurse Practitioner –Reduce FTE?• Student Employees• STNC – backfill NPs• Social Worker/Referral Case Manager• Other?
SRJC’s SMHP Grant – PEERS Coalition
Becky Fein, MPH
http://srjcpeers.wordpress.com/ https://www.facebook.com/srjcpeers
Suicide and SRJC Students
Statistically speaking, it is highly likely that faculty and staff will interact with a student who is at-risk for psychological distress.
Suicide is the 2nd leading cause of death for college students
Almost 80% of today’s students that commit suicide aren’t seen by a mental health counselor
1.1% [ SRJC 3% ] say they actually attempted suicide in the past 12 months
Almost 7% [SRJC: 9%] seriously considered suicide in the past 12 months
This means that 2,520 SRJC students have seriously considered suicide in the past year
© 2012 Kognito Interactive. All Rights Reserved.
http://vimeo.com/35019671At-Risk for Faculty and Staff
At-Risk for Student Leaders
Creating a Supportive Campus for Student Veterans
Kognito – short demos
Staff & Faculty:DCC/IM MeetingFlex CreditStaff development webpageCIRT webpageSHS webpage
Student training:PEERS Coalition = Student Interns and participantsSHS webpage Bear FactsSH 101
Veterans on CampusFlex CreditStaff development webpage
Kognito Training Dissemination PlanKognito – SRJC dissemination plan
At-Risk for Faculty & Staff: http://kognitocampus.com/faculty/cccEnrollment key: ccc8752
Flex Credit 1.0 Hour available
At-Risk for Student Leaders:http://kognitocampus.com/student/cccEnrollment key: ccc6445
Veterans on Campus:http://kognitocampus.com/vet/cccEnrollment key: ccc4554
Kognito – Access Codes