Assessing Patient Behavioral Health (BH) Needs
Community Collaboration
Providers who have succeeded in achieving admission to BH facilities for their patients with BD reported that their pre-existing relationships with these facilities enabled them to secure placements for their patients. Therefore, BD SUMHAC recommends that providers who work with people with BD cultivate relationships with community BH providers and organizations and introduce them to the BD community. As you reach out to local MH and SUD facilities, offer basic education about BD, including the various treatment options (i.e., prophylaxis vs. on-demand, infusion vs. injection), and determine whether they will accept patients with BD. This education will help mitigate concerns from the facility staff that BD are too medically complex and cannot be managed at their facility. Additionally, providers of people with BD should become familiar with the types of insurance each local BH program accepts.
Consider developing relationships with:
Inpatient and residential SUD treatment facilities
Inpatient and residential MH treatment facilities
Emergency department staff
Hospital social workers and/or discharge planners
Addiction medicine specialists
Outpatient SUD and MH treatment programs
Medication assisted therapy (MAT) providers/methadone treatment centers
Psychiatrists, counselors, and therapists
Alcoholics anonymous (AA) and narcotics anonymous (NA) programs
Primary care providers