niatx action campaign ii webinar presented by: charlie day, co-founder
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The South Dakota Model: Building Sustainability and Reach Into A Conventional ROSC Through Private Sector Engagement. NIATX ACTION CAMPAIGN II WEBINAR PRESENTED BY: CHARLIE DAY, CO-FOUNDER FACE IT! SIOUX FALLS, INC.™ WWW.FACEITSIOUXFALLS.ORG JANUARY 20, 2011. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
NIATX ACTION CAMPAIGN II WEBINAR
PRESENTED BY: CHARLIE DAY, CO-FOUNDERFACE IT! SIOUX FALLS, INC.™
WWW.FACEITSIOUXFALLS.ORG
JANUARY 20, 2011
The South Dakota Model: Building Sustainability and Reach Into A
Conventional ROSC Through Private Sector Engagement
Some NIATx & Face It™ Overlaps
(1) Highly Aligned Missions:– NIATx: to improve care delivery to help people
live better lives– Face It™: to dramatically increase both the
number of individuals and families in recovery and the quality and accessibility of services by creating a recovery-oriented system of care
(2) Substance Use Disorder (SUD) Is A Chronic Disease
(3) Define “Customer” Broadly(4) The Private Sector Can Be A Good Partner
What Face It™ Is About
(1) A Recovery-Oriented System of Care (ROSC) model developed with full community participation through a several month town hall process to create a broad “community of recovery”
(2) A not-for-profit Recovery Community Organization (RCO) at the heart of the ROSC that supports extension of the “community of recovery” into the private sector (the “workplace initiative”)
(3) An RCO that delivers peer-to-peer services that are financed by a sustainable private sector funding model built on measurable “value propositions”
What Face It™ Is About (cont’d)
(4) A world-class Awareness Program that attacks the psychological barriers that keep people from getting help
(5) Participating with the provider community to create an integrated mental health “carve out” – a continuum of services organized and managed by the region’s mental health provider that is focused on service delivery by credentialed and selected non-credentialed providers to reflect the chronic nature of the disease
Why The Private Sector Is Primed To Help
“Private sector” includes, in part, employers, providers, health insurance companies, economic development organizations and foundations interested in quality of life
Businesses are very familiar with process improvement, cost control, employee retention, customer retention AND responding to heath care reform
Businesses, providers and insurance companies are increasingly adopting “chronic disease management” programs for all the above reasons
Engaging The Private Sector To Lead Change
The private sector carries a huge proportion of the costs of SUD
• +/- 75% of SUD sufferers go to work• +/- less than 1 in 4 seek help
Employers understand “value propositions” (like making SUD support part of workplace “chronic disease management” programs) that focus on improved efficiency, employee retention & customer loyalty
How To Start: Approach private sector leaders to support an ROSC development “town hall process” by discussing the benefits of extending the “community of recovery” into the workplace
Some Characteristics of Communities Where The Model Can Easily Be Considered
Communities where: Employers regard their employees as assets Employers, providers & health insurers are
already using “chronic disease management” programs in the workplace to attack the costs of diabetes & hypertension
Communities where the private sector is concerned about responding to health care reform
Communities that have a tradition of dealing with community-wide problems
There is a catalyst organization
Wrap Up
Questions?Contact Information
Mary Hitzemann, ED, Face It! Sioux Falls™ (also a co-creator of the “workplace initiative”)
Charlie Day, Co-founder, Face It! Sioux Falls™[email protected]