Categories Press Releases

Florida’s Managing Entities Help Support Veterans with Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Issues

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.–Florida’s seven Managing Entities, which oversee the state’s behavioral health safety net system, support veterans with mental health and/or substance use issues. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, in 2020, the suicide rate for veterans was 57.3% higher than that of non-veteran adults. Also in 2020, suicide was the second leading cause of death among veterans under 45.

“Florida is home to the third largest veteran population in the nation, and under the leadership of Governor Ron DeSantis, Florida has prioritized connecting veterans with the behavioral health services they need to lead healthy lives,” said Florida Association of Managing Entities CEO Natalie K. Kelly.

Florida’s behavioral health safety net system connects Floridians with behavioral health providers–regardless of whether one is insured.

This safety net system consists of Florida’s seven behavioral health Managing Entities that work with a network of over 300 behavioral health care providers, delivering services to more than 300,000 of Florida’s most vulnerable residents, including: children, expectant mothers, veterans, and the chronically homeless. 

Behavioral health providers within the network provide essential services, such as: as crisis stabilization, care coordination, housing, transportation, and employment. Care coordination is critical and ensures that people receive various services to meet their unique needs. 

More information is available here.

Categories Uncategorized

Tampa General Hospital Partners with Central Florida Behavioral Health Network to Combat the Opioid Epidemic in Hillsborough County

The academic health system works to increase access to behavioral health services with support from community partners.

Tampa, FL (Oct. 16, 2023) – Tampa General Hospital (TGH) announced today a new partnership with the Central Florida Behavioral Health Network (CFBHN) to treat Floridians suffering from opioid use in Hillsborough County and help put an end to the epidemic. Through a mobile unit program, IDEA (Infectious Disease Elimination Act) Exchange Tampa, Tampa General and CFBHN are offering a broad array of low-barrier health care services for those affected by opioid use disorder in the local community. This program is the first of its kind in the region.

“IDEA Exchange Tampa is the only mobile program in the region that offers treatment to Floridians affected by an opioid use epidemic,” said Dr. Jason Wilson, FACEP, associate professor and director of the Division of Emergency Medicine in the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine, associate medical director of the Emergency Department at Tampa General Hospital, and one of the medical directors for IDEA Exchange Tampa. “Deaths tied to opioid overdose in Hillsborough County this year are expected to exceed the 2022 death toll. By increasing access to care through the mobile unit, we can effectively prevent drug-related deaths and help patients get on the road to recovery.”

IDEA Exchange Tampa is free and offers both confidential and anonymous treatment options for symptoms that do not require an emergency room visit. Using the mobile unit, Tampa General and CFBHN can reach individuals in the communities where they live to administer buprenorphine, an FDA approved medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD), offer HIV and Hepatitis C screenings and treatments, treat general and injection-related wounds, provide referrals to addiction treatment programs, distribute Narcan, engage in peer navigation and address structural determinants of health through resources like an on-site food pantry and insurance navigation.

This mobile unit aims to reach individuals who either do not typically qualify for treatment in the community or are unable to access treatment. Tampa General and CFBHN have worked tirelessly to develop the relationships necessary to launch this partnership, which includes collaboration with several community stakeholders to address social determinants of health. Visits to IDEA Exchange Tampa focus on patients’ overall health and treatment options. In the three years since the mobile unit launched, IDEA Exchange Tampa has amassed more than 1,400 patients, reversed approximately 500 overdoses per month and treated 17 cases of HIV. “I am deeply moved by the positive effects this program has had in the local community, with empathy as a pillar of everything we do. We consider participants part of our key stakeholder network,” said Dr. Heather Henderson, CAP, CRPS, and one of the IDEA Exchange Tampa program directors.

Participants have the right to take an active role in developing new policies and services through the IDEA Exchange Tampa Community Advisory Board and are encouraged to do so. IDEA Exchange Tampa staff function in a peer capacity as well, through direct recovery from substance use or mental health. In addition, researchers within IDEA Exchange Tampa are using anonymous data from the program to measure impacts and identify facilitating factors, potential barriers to entry and effective risk-reduction tactics in the community.

“A partnership with an academic health system like TGH means that we can exponentially further our reach and improve care,” said Alan Davidson, MA, LMHC, the president and chief executive officer at CFBHN. “Providing patients with access to innovative health care solutions opens up a pathway which allows them the ability to pursue recovery in the future.”

IDEA Exchange Tampa is supported through collaborations among organizations throughout Florida, such as the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), Frontlines of Communities in the United States (FOCUS), Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE), AIDS United, USF Health, Tampa Bay Street Medicine, Pioneer Medical Foundation, Hillsborough County government and the Florida Harm Reduction Collective. To learn more about Tampa General, please visit https://www.tgh.org/. To learn more about CFBHN, please visit https://www.cfbhn.org/. To learn more about IDEA Exchange Tampa, please visit https://www.ideaexchangetampa.com/.

ABOUT TAMPA GENERAL HOSPITAL
Tampa General Hospital, a 1,040-bed, not-for-profit, academic health system, is one of the largest hospitals in America and delivers world-class care as the region’s only center for Level l trauma and comprehensive burn care. Tampa General Hospital is the highest-ranked hospital in the
market in U.S. News and World Report’s 2023-24 Best Hospitals, with six specialties ranking among the top 50 best hospital programs in the United States. Tampa General Hospital has been designated as a model of excellence by the 2022 Fortune/Merative 100 Top Hospitals list. The academic health system’s commitment to growing and developing its team members is recognized by two prestigious Forbes magazine rankings – in the top 100 nationally in the 2023 America’s Best Employers for Women and top 25 in Florida in the 2023 America’s Best Employers by State. Tampa General is the safety net hospital for the region, caring for everyone regardless of their ability to pay, and in fiscal year 2021, provided a net community benefit worth more than $224.5 million in the form of health care for underinsured patients, community education, and financial support to community health organizations in Tampa Bay. It is one of the nation’s busiest adult solid organ transplant centers and is the primary teaching hospital for the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine. With six medical helicopters, Tampa General Hospital transports critically injured or ill patients from 23 surrounding counties to receive the advanced care they need. Tampa General houses a nationally accredited comprehensive stroke center, and its 32-bed Neuroscience, Intensive Care Unit is the largest on the West Coast of Florida. It also is home to the Jennifer Leigh Muma 82-bed neonatal intensive care unit, and a nationally accredited rehabilitation center. Tampa General Hospital’s footprint includes 17 Tampa General Medical Group Primary Care offices, TGH Family Care Center Kennedy, TGH Outpatient Center, TGH Virtual Health, and 21 TGH Imaging outpatient radiology centers throughout Hillsborough, Pasco, Pinellas and Palm Beach
counties. Tampa Bay area residents also receive world-class care from the TGH Urgent Care powered by Fast Track network of clinics. To see a medical care professional live anytime, anywhere on a smartphone, tablet or computer, visit Virtual Health | Tampa General Hospital (tgh.org).
As one of the largest hospitals in the country, Tampa General Hospital is the first in Florida to partner with GE Healthcare and open a clinical command center that provides real-time situational awareness to improve and better coordinate patient care at a lower cost. For more information, go to www.tgh.org.

ABOUT CFBHN
Central Florida Behavioral Health Network is a managing entity contracted with the Department of Children and Families to develop and manage the public safety net of care for behavioral health services. They are a not for profit 501 (c) (3) corporation and a CARF International Accredited Services Management Network organization* contracting with community service organizations to provide a full array of publically funded mental health and substance abuse services in fourteen SunCoast counties: Charlotte, Collier, Desoto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Highlands, Hillsborough, Lee, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, and Sarasota. Services include acute care, residential treatment, housing, medical, outpatient, recovery support, and prevention.

CARF is the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities Providing a transformational influence that is recovery focused, CFBHN empowers local communities to develop, advocate for, and implement innovative solutions to social, economic, and individual health and wellness problems impacting lives. They further accomplish their mission by seeking, developing and nurturing collaborative partnerships with high performing providers of compassionate and quality services. Together, CFBHN and these partners commit to meet the changing needs of public sector leadership, private sector employers and employees, and individuals who are in need of specialty healthcare services. To support these partnerships, CFBHN provides education and training, advocacy, research and development, and knowledge sharing of best practices.

Categories Press Releases

Florida Association of Managing Entities Recognizes Suicide Prevention Month

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The rate of suicide in the U.S. reached the highest on record in 2022 with 46,369 lives lost to suicide. September is National Suicide Prevention Month, and the Florida Association of Managing Entities (FAME) reminds Floridians that behavioral health services are available. 

According to the CDC, from 2011 to 2022, the number of suicides has increased by 16%. Federal data also shows an alarming increase in suicide rates among youth and young adults. From 2011 to 2021, the suicide rate among people ages 10-24 increased by 60%.

“It’s clear that the nation is in a mental health crisis. While there are a multitude of factors that are contributing to increased suicide rates, such as drug use, social isolation, social media, untreated mental health issues, and more, one thing is clear – we must continue to prioritize connecting life-saving behavioral health services with those who need it,” said Natalie Kelly, CEO of FAME.

Florida’s seven Managing Entities oversee Florida’s behavioral health safety net system of more than 300 providers. The Managing Entities meet the unique needs of Florida’s communities. There are various programs that help stabilize individuals who need it and connect them with lifesaving behavioral health services, engaging partners such as the faith-based and veteran communities.

Some of these programs include: Mobile Response Teams of highly trained counselors that de-escalate situations; high level of care coordination for individuals; hospital bridge programs that coordinate services after an individual is stabilized in the emergency department; and school mental health services among other behavioral health services.

Florida’s Managing Entities collaborate with providers that deliver services to over 300,000 of Florida’s most vulnerable residents, including children, expectant mothers, veterans, and the chronically homeless. Additionally, the system provides nearly 1.7 million Floridians with preventative services and reaches hundreds of thousands more through indirect preventative services, such as education initiatives.

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About the Florida Association of Managing Entities

The Florida Association of Managing Entities (FAME) is the statewide organization representing Florida’s seven Managing Entities. FAME’s mission is to advance the behavioral health recovery of individuals and their families in the state of Florida. For more information, visit FLManagingEntities.com

Categories In The News

Peer Support Space Provides Twice Daily Group Sessions for Floridians With Post-Hurricane Anxiety

ORLANDO, Fla. – Peer Support Space, a provider within Behavioral Health Managing Entity Central Florida Cares’ network, is hosting twice daily group online sessions for those who have hurricane-related anxiety.

Interested Floridians, ages 18 and up, can join a session at either 12 p.m. or 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday by using the following link: https://peersupportspace.org/daily-gatherings

“There’s a significant emotional toll for individuals who have experienced a hurricane, and we’re grateful that Peer Support Space is offering these virtual group sessions to address the anxiety many Floridians are experiencing right now,” said Central Florida Cares CEO Maria Bledsoe.

About Central Florida Cares

Central Florida Cares Health System, Inc. is one of Florida’s seven Behavioral Health Managing Entities and has managed substance use and mental health services for Brevard, Orange, Osceola, and Seminole counties, and is supported by Florida’s Department of Children and Families. Central Florida Cares fund a services network of many organizations offering various levels of treatment options. 

Categories Press Releases

Behavioral Health Providers Join Forces to Revolutionize Children’s Mental Health Services in Pasco and Hillsborough Schools

TAMPA, Fla.-The Central Florida Behavioral Health Network convenes Pasco and Hillsborough counties’ school districts to coordinate mental health services for children and families within the school districts. 

Coordinating mental health services within schools is key to giving behavioral health experts the access they need to support children and their families with mental health services, while taking mental health services off of teachers’ plates. This model could serve as a model for the State of Florida. 

“The partnership with Central Florida Behavioral Health Network has been invaluable to Hillsborough County Public Schools. Thousands of students and families have received mental health support and the impact has been felt across schools and the community. We have been able to establish therapists at over 100 schools across the district and coordinate mental health services for students in the most appropriate setting. We continue to work with Central Florida Behavioral Health Network to create innovative ways to provide interventions in a timely and cost-effective way to individuals, seeking to break down barriers to treatment while reducing the stigma surrounding mental health,” said Hillsborough County Public Schools Interim Superintendent Van Ayres.

“Today we have 22 providers coordinating behavioral health systems of care in Pasco and Hillsborough schools, providing much-needed services to children and their families. Our providers work with children to maximize their potential in schools, so schools can focus on teaching, not addressing mental health issues,” said Central Florida Behavioral Health Network CEO Alan Davidson.

The Central Florida Behavioral Health Network is one of the state’s seven Behavioral Health Managing Entities. Florida’s local Managing Entities work with a network of over 300 behavioral health care providers who deliver services to over 300,000 of Florida’s most vulnerable residents, including children, expectant mothers, veterans, and the chronically homeless. Additionally, the system provides nearly 1.7 million Floridians with preventative services and reaches hundreds of thousands more through indirect preventative services, such as education initiatives.

Providers meet patients’ diverse needs with “wraparound services” that not only address mental health issues and substance abuse, but also assist with housing, transportation, and employment. Community boards administer, manage, and ensure accountability of state and federal funds for behavioral health services, keeping oversight and accountability closest to the people they serve.