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Kan. Mental Health System At Crossroads As Legislative Session Approaches

Mental health advocates face several changes at the start of the 2016 Kansas Legislature approaches. That includes the departure of Kari Bruffett, secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, which handles mental health issues. HEARTLAND HEALTH MONTIOR FILE PHOTO
Mental health advocates face several changes at the start of the 2016 Kansas Legislature approaches. That includes the departure of Kari Bruffett, secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, which handles mental health issues.
HEARTLAND HEALTH MONTIOR FILE PHOTO

By ANDY MARSO

Kansas mental health advocates will enter the 2016 session at a critical juncture, 25 years into the state’s effort to move away from institutionalization to community-based care.

Crowded prisons and state hospitals have helped create momentum for statewide reforms to fill the gaps in that system — to provide a “continuum of care” to keep Kansans with persistent mental illness out of crisis.

But the state’s ongoing budget problems limit the Legislature’s ability to increase funding for the state hospitals or community-based mental health resources. And last year’s long, bitter tax fight has sapped some of the energy for any major legislative debate before the 2016 elections.

“Every forum I have been to with legislators, they are dreading January,” Amy Campbell, a lobbyist for the Kansas Mental Health Coalition, told the coalition last week. “They don’t want to come back. They want a short session. They want to go home and run for office with relatively few controversial votes on their record.”

At the same time, the Cabinet agency that handles many mental health issues — the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services — is in flux.

KDADS Secretary Kari Bruffett has been working for months with a committee of experts on continuum of care reform.

But Bruffett will leave the agency at the end of 2015 to take a job as policy director for the Kansas Health Institute. Her interim replacement, Tim Keck, is a former Kansas Department of Health and Environment attorney who is little-known in the mental health community.

As mental health advocates discuss continuum of care, they remain wary of a legislative change that allowed state regulation of antipsychotic medications prescribed to Medicaid recipients. They also disagree over a proposal allowing treatment centers to hold people involuntarily for up to 72 hours.

Meanwhile, Osawatomie State Hospital remains unable to take more patients as federally mandated renovations continue. Last week federal officials announced they were pulling Medicare reimbursements for Osawatomie patients admitted after Monday because conditions at the facility don’t comply with their regulations. The reported rape of an employee at Osawatomie State Hospital in October exposed security concerns that federal officials cited when they decided to halt Medicare payments to the facility.

All of which adds up to an uncertain session with a lot on the line.

Continuum of care

The Adult Continuum of Care Committee met five times in May and June before issuing a 42-page report in July to Bruffett.

The report’s recommendations included expanding Medicaid eligibility, restoring bed capacity at the Osawatomie hospital, lobbying for changes to federal regulations, limiting Medicaid payments for mental health services provided in large inpatient institutions and creating more crisis intervention services throughout the state.

Rather than disbanding following the report’s release, the continuum of care committee was made part of the Governor’s Behavioral Health Planning Council to continue working with the administration on implementation.

Susan Crain Lewis, president and CEO of Mental Health America of the Heartland in Kansas City, Kan., said Bruffett had been a good partner in that effort and the timing of her departure was unfortunate.

“I’m deeply hopeful that both the interim secretary and whoever ends up in that position will see the wisdom of Secretary Bruffett and of the individuals in that group and really move forward with that,” Lewis said.

KDADS spokeswoman Angela de Rocha said via email that the agency remains committed to continuum of care reform.

“The secretary’s departure does not mean that we are dropping this initiative,” de Rocha said.

Implementing the recommendations could be a challenge if it requires any additional state funding, though.

Campbell said she has been told “a couple of times” that the KDADS budget won’t be reduced, but she advised the mental health coalition members to watch individual program budgets carefully.

“Budget is going to again be a key issue for us,” Campbell said. “For us to be able to identify where money is being moved from and to, and how that is going to affect the programs that we care about is going to be a full-time job this session.”

Campbell said she believes legislative leaders know that the mental health system is “at a crisis point,” but their first priority is balancing the larger state budget.

Ted Jester, KDADS assistant director of mental health services, told the coalition that the agency is considering asking legislators to approve a mental health checkoff on income tax forms to fund “mini-grants that could grow over time” for community-based behavioral health programs.

Details of the checkoff proposal are not yet available, but Lewis said such a measure wouldn’t help financially until 2017 at the earliest, given the legislative schedule and the income tax filing schedule.

She and other advocates say the need to beef up community-based services is more immediate, especially given the limited capacity at Osawatomie, which is one of two state-run inpatient facilities for Kansans with severe and persistent mental illness.

The hospital is down 60 of its 206 beds during renovations, but de Rocha said construction is going well and some existing patients are being shifted into a new unit that could soon restore half the missing capacity.

“At some point we’ll be able to start taking new patients,” de Rocha said. “We are not there yet.”

Involuntary hold proposal

In the absence of better options for crisis management, a coalition of mental health professionals, police and court officials from four high-population counties in northeast Kansas have drafted a proposal to allow community-based treatment facilities to hold people who are having a mental health crisis against their will for up to 72 hours.

The proposal has divided the mental health community. Some argue that it’s a better alternative to the status quo, in which a mental health crisis can land a person in an emergency room or jail — sometimes for more than 72 hours — as they wait for a bed at a state hospital or other inpatient facility.

Other mental health advocates have serious reservations about the proposal’s threat to civil liberties.

“I don’t want people in jail,” Lewis said. “But at least you have due process while you’re in there.”

Lewis said the draft of the proposal she has seen is too broad in terms of when and for whom the 72-hour hold can be used. It also doesn’t provide any liability protection for police officers or mental health workers, which she said gives them an incentive to invoke the involuntary hold whenever possible and then keep the person detained for the full 72 hours.

“I would love to see something that works,” Lewis said. “This one’s got some real problems.”

Lewis and Rick Cagan, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness Kansas office, both said they think some form of the proposal could pop up during the legislative session.

Cagan’s group is still evaluating it, but he said in September that some of his board members are supportive. NAMI’s Texas branch is bullish on a similar program in that state because of its potential to decriminalize mental illness.

Still, Cagan said in a recent interview that even if the involuntary hold measure works as planned, it wouldn’t close the holes in the mental health system.

“This is not a panacea, this is more on the crisis end of the system,” Cagan said. “The desire would be (that) we’re able to focus on building up less intensive, less restrictive aspects of the system.”

The mental health coalition advocates agreed it would be better if Kansans were getting the preventative mental health care they needed to manage their symptoms, so that discussion of holding them against their will was not necessary.

But Kyle Kessler, executive director of the Association of Community Mental Health Centers of Kansas, said that’s not the case. The gap is especially large for Kansans with mental health problems that have exceeded routine maintenance but don’t yet require inpatient hospitalization.

“We don’t have nearly the amount of quick and efficient connectivity to intensive outpatient services that we did before,” Kessler said. “So this is kind of coming about. This is tugging one end and expecting the other not to move.”

Mental health medication committee

Mental health advocates also are closely watching the effects of a law passed last session that allows the state to regulate mental health drugs within Medicaid by using tools like prior authorization requirements.

Medicaid in Kansas is now administered by three private insurance companies through a managed care program called KanCare. The advocates were concerned about how the for-profit companies might use prior authorizations.

But they backed off their opposition after KDHE officials changed the proposal to add an advisory committee of medical professionals to vet new regulations before they go to KDHE’s Drug Utilization Review Board, which writes the actual guidelines.

Now that the Mental Health Medication Advisory Committee has begun meeting, the advocates are again concerned about some of what they’re seeing.

“I think the jury’s still out,” Cagan said.

Lewis and others have said that the committee’s posted agendas are too vague. The committee requires those who wish to provide public comments to sign up ahead of time but doesn’t list which drugs will be discussed.

“It has been pointed out that we are not being given the information we need to provide cogent public comment,” Lewis said.

KDHE spokeswoman Sara Belfry said via email that the agendas list common drug classes like “antipsychotics” and “SNRIs,” and that getting more specific is not necessary.

“We don’t list specific drugs because the subjects listed on the agenda are self-explanatory,” Belfry said.

But Lewis said that’s not what mental health advocates agreed to last session, and if changes aren’t made the advocates might seek help from legislators.

She had similar concerns about the role of the MCO representatives at the meetings. The MCOs have no seats on the actual committee, but Lewis said that from one meeting to the next they’ve gradually moved from the outer ring of seats with the other observers to seats at the inner tables alongside committee members.

“This is not what people signed up for,” Lewis said. “There’s clearly the evidence of excessive influence.”

Andy Marso is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach him on Twitter @andymarso.

Editor’s note: KHI News Service is affiliated with but editorially independent of the Kansas Health Institute.

South Main to be closed at Big Creek bridge starting today

road-closed-2CITY OF HAYS

Please be advised that beginning Tuesday,January 3, 2017, south Main Street will be closed to traffic at the Big Creek bridge for pavement repairs. This work should be completed by the end of the day on Friday, January 6, 2017.

Signs will be in place to direct the traveling public. The traveling public should use caution and if at all possible avoid these areas.

The city of Hays regrets any inconvenience this may cause to the public. If there are any questions, please call the Public Works Department at (785) 628-7350.

State survey will study dropping Kansas groundwater levels

KGS image
KGS image

 

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Crews are undertaking an annual effort to monitor changes in groundwater levels in western and central Kansas.

The Kansas Geological Survey will measure nearly 570 wells beginning early next month. The Kansas Department of Agriculture’s Division of Water Resources will measure about 830 additional wells.

Ninety percent of the wells to be measured draw water from the massive High Plains aquifer system, which consists largely of the Ogallala aquifer. The remaining 10 percent are drilled into the Dakota aquifer and other deeper systems or shallow alluvial aquifers along creeks and rivers.

The data are used by landowners, state and federal agencies, local groundwater management districts, private entities and the general public.

Water levels in the 1,400-well network declined an average of 0.87 feet during 2014.

Historical annual measurements for each well are available at the Survey’s website.

No new applications for Kansas Innovative school program

Kansas Department of EducationTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas program that waives state laws and regulations for participating schools will remain its current size in 2016.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports  no school districts applied to join the Coalition of Innovative School Districts in 2016. The Legislature created the Coalition of Innovative School Districts in 2013 as a deregulation program meant to remove barriers to better school performance.

The coalition includes six districts, while up to 20 percent of the state’s 286 public school districts can join.

Sen. Steve Abrams introduced the legislation creating the program and says the low participation rates aren’t cause for concern.

Among the program’s critics is the Kansas National Education Association, which says the program doesn’t address the real obstacle to innovation in Kansas schools, which KNEA says is insufficient state funding.

Tigers hold off Pitt State for fifth straight win

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

HAYS, Kan. – Jake Stoppel scored a career-high 24 points to lead Fort Hays State to an 89-78 win over Pittsburg State in front of 2,768 Saturday at Gross Coliseum. Stoppel hit 10 of 15 from the field and was 4 of 5 from the free throw line as the Tigers (10-2, 4-2 MIAA) win their fifth straight overall and fourth straight in conference play.

The Gorillas (7-6, 2-5) have lost five straight after a 7-1 start.

Mark Johnson Postgame Interview


Trey O’Neil Postgame Interview


Game Highlights

 

Fort Hays State shot 59-percent for the game as they built a 15 point second half lead only to see Pitt State pull within four with 10:25 to play. The Tigers answered with a 9-2 run keyed by a Trey O’Neil 3-pointer to push the lead to 11.

Rob Davis went 8-for-8 from the free throw line and scored 14. Craig Nicholson, playing for the first time in five games since a foot injury, added 12 points and dished out nine assists. O’Neil and Hadley Gillum both scored 10.

The Tigers turned the ball over 19 times, resulting in 23 points for the Gorillas off of turnovers. FHSU won the rebounding battle 35-28 and shot 41-percent from 3-point range and hit 16-of-19 from the free throw line.

Arkansas motors past Kansas State in Liberty Bowl

By STEVE MEGARGEE
AP Sports Writer

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Alex Collins ran for 185 yards and three touchdowns and Arkansas capped its late-season surge with a 45-23 victory over Kansas State on Saturday in the Liberty Bowl.

Ranked 18th to open the season, Arkansas stumbled through a 1-3 start that knocked the Razorbacks out of the Top 25. The Razorbacks (8-5) turned things around won six of their last seven games.

Collins overwhelmed Kansas State’s defense in front of a sellout crowd of 61,136, the fourth-largest crowd in the game’s 57-year history.

Kansas State (6-7) finished a season below .500 for the first time since Bill Snyder began his second stint as coach in 2009.

Arkansas’ Brandon Allen was 20 of 26 for 315 yards with one touchdown and one interception. Kansas State’s Kody Cook, starting at quarterback for the first time, went 12 of 24 for 163 yards with a touchdown.

Woman robbed in Kansas hotel room

robberyWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police are investigating after a 19-year-old woman reported being robbed at gunpoint inside her hotel room.

The Wichita Eagle reports the robbery was reported early Saturday at a west Wichita hotel.

Wichita police Sgt. Joe Kennedy says the victim told police she answered the door to two men who were acquaintances of an acquaintance of hers. He says shortly after they were let into the room, the two men pulled out handguns and demanded money.

After the robbery, the two men got into an SUV and left.

No injuries were reported.

No. 2 Kansas swamps No. 23 Baylor with big run in win

By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Wayne Selden scored 24 points, Perry Ellis added 17 and No. 2 Kansas used a big run over the first 10 minutes to swamp No. 23 Baylor 102-74 on Saturday in their Big 12 opener.

Devonte Graham added 15 points and Frank Mason III had 11 for the Jayhawks (12-1, 1-0), who charged out to a 22-4 lead, then turned back every attempt by the Bears (10-3, 0-1) to make it a game.

It was the Jayhawks’ sixth straight win over Baylor — which has never won in 14 trips to Lawrence — and 25th consecutive conference-opening win. It was also their 31st straight win at Allen Fieldhouse, where No. 3 ranked Oklahoma will visit for another high-profile showdown Monday night.

Taurean Prince had 13 of his 17 points in the second half for Baylor. Lester Medford added 15, all but three after the break, while Rico Gathers finished with 12 points and nine rebounds.

Big first half carries FHSU women past Pittsburg State

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

HAYS, Kan. – Fort Hays State used 24-4 first half run to build a 23-point lead and defeat the Pittsburg State Gorillas 77-57 Saturday afternoon in front of 2,225 at Gross Coliseum. The Tigers shot 53-percent in the first half as they bounce back from their first loss of the season to improve to 11-1 overall and 5-1 in the MIAA.

Tony Hobson Postgame Interview

 

Game Highlights

 

The Gorillas, who were held to their season-low in points, has lost two of their last three and droops to 10-3 and 4-3 om conference play.

Pitt State pulled within 14 and had the ball midway through the fourth quarter, but a steal and layup by Nicola Kacperska sparked a 9-0 run to push the lead back to 23.

Chelsea Mason led three Tigers in double-figures with 16 points. Jill Faxon added 13 and Beth Bohuslavsky 10.

The Tigers forced 18 Pitt State turnvers resulting in 33 points.

Bernard “Bernie” J. Schreiner

Bernard “Bernie” J. Schreiner, age 69, of Ogallah, passed away Tuesday, December 29, 2015 atSchreiner, Bernie Pic Obit Hays Medical Center. He was born November 15, 1946, in Hays, to Richard and Juliette Ann (Ferland) Schreiner.

Bernie was a 1964 graduate of Trego Community High School. He served our country in the United States Navy during the Vietnam War, and was a very proud Veteran. On June 7, 1966, he was united in marriage to Valree Ziegler. After Bernie’s military service, he settled with his wife and three children in Ogallah, KS, where he owned and operated Schreiner Trucking for many years. He was a member of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Ellis, and was a lifetime member of the VFW. Bernie was an avid outdoorsman who loved to fish, hunt, camp, and travel. He loved to ride his motorcycle, and was a proud member of the Harley Owners Group. Bernie loved life and had many hobbies, but most important to him was time spent with his beloved wife Valree, and all of his kids and grandkids. Bernie left fond memories in the hearts of his family and friends – Many camping trips, boat rides, vacations, family gatherings, polka dances and parties. He will be greatly missed by many.

He is survived by his wife Valree, of the family home; a son, Bernie E. Schreiner (Cheryl Amundson) of Littleton, Colorado; two daughters, Lisa (Allan) Reiter and Amy (Jamison) Miller, all of Ellis; five grandchildren, Olivia Reiter, Haley Reiter, Maxson Miller, Evalyn Miller, and Jillian Miller; two brothers, Richard A. (Lucy) of Puyallup, Washington, and Alvin (Danene) of Woodland Park, Colorado; four sisters, Deanne (Jack) Level of Plano, Texas, Terri Budzyna of Springfield, Missouri, Nanette (Joel) Woodall of WaKeeney, and Cindy (Gary) Werth of Quinter; and numerous nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents.

Mass of Christian Burial will be 10:30 a.m., Monday, January 4, 2015 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Ellis. Burial will be in the Kansas Veterans’ Cemetery, WaKeeney. Military honors will be provided by the United States Navy Honor Guard.

Visitation will be at the funeral home in WaKeeney, Sunday evening from 5:00 to 7:00, with a parish vigil service to follow at 7:00.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions are suggested to Dreiling-Schmidt Cancer Institute. Checks made to the organization may be sent to Schmitt Funeral Home, 336 North 12th, WaKeeney, KS 67672.

Condolences: www.schmittfuneral.com

No. 19 West Virginia fights off Kansas State 87-83 in 2OT

By TATE STEINLAGE
Associated Press

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Jaysean Paige scored 18 of his 25 points after halftime, Tarik Phillip connected on a floater with 4.5 seconds left in the second overtime and West Virginia toughed out an 87-83 victory over Kansas State on Saturday in the Big 12 opener for both teams.

Phillip finished with 14 points and five assists for the Mountaineers (12-1, 1-0) and Daxter Miles Jr. had 10 points.

Two free throws by D.J. Johnson with 22 seconds left in regulation sent the game to overtime where the teams traded scores but couldn’t break the tie. The Mountaineers then used eight free throws and the big-time floater from Phillip late in the shot clock to seal the victory.

Barry Brown led Kansas State with 20 points on 6-of-12 shooting while Wesley Iwundu, Kamau Stokes and Dean Wade combined for 44 points on 14-of-29 shooting.

 

Welcome rains lead to drop in Kan. water use violations

rainHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A state official says abundant rainfall last year helped reduce the number of water use violators in Kansas.

The Hutchinson News reports that Kansas Department of Agriculture data show 10 Kansas irrigators were fined in 2015 for tampering with their water meter or falsifying their water use report. About 20 other water users were fined for overpumping their water right for the second or third time.

Most of the cases were for actions in 2014, with a few from 2013. Some other cases are still being completed by state officials.

Lane Letourneau, water appropriations manager for the state, says the rain helped people implement better water management strategies.

He also credited a program that allows irrigators to use more water during drought years and bank water during wet ones.

SCHROCK: A teacher’s creed

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.
John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

I am a professional.

I do not earn hourly wages or punch a time clock. I am a salaried professional who works as long as needed to get the work done. My salary should reflect the importance of my profession in society.

I alone determine what, how and when to teach the components of my discipline within a range of recognized professional practices. I consult with my professional colleagues, but in the end I determine my teaching practices. I do not yield that curricular duty to textbook publishers or external agencies. While discipline knowledge may be universal, students are not uniform in experience background nor ability.

I teach both my discipline and my students. Students come into my course as unique students. They should graduate from my course as unique students.

I know my discipline thoroughly because a teacher cannot teach what a teacher does not know. And I know my discipline at least one level deeper than what I teach because I must get the lesson correct and be able to carry advanced students further. I have a broad liberal arts education because I am preparing students for a full life, not just for a job.

I have a unique set of communication skills that fit with a particular range of students. Other teaching colleagues have unique sets of skills as well that may often be different. By interacting with a variety of teaching personalities, students learn to interact with the variety of people they will encounter in life.

The duty of school administration and staff is to provide teachers and students with the support and resources we need.

Just as doctors are the core professionals of a hospital, teachers are the core professionals of a school. And just as the best of doctors lose patients, the best of teachers lose students. This does not mean that doctors want patients to die or teachers want students to fail, but that despite our best efforts, there are many factors beyond our control that are involved in the medical and teaching arts.

Teaching is an art. And artists vary in how they practice. A teacher who inspires one student may not inspire another.

As a teacher I am a role model for honesty, work and study ethic, and dignity. Within the context of my discipline, I work with my students. –To reinforce honesty. –To encourage hard work and study. –To promote personal dignity. –To practice students in tolerance and respect for others who differ in language, race, religion, physical features, gender, intelligence and values. –To require respectful behavior so they will in turn deserve respect. –To help students grow to become young ladies and young gentlemen.

I have a responsibility to be excited about my discipline. But each student is responsible for his/her intrinsic motivation.

I will evaluate each student’s intellectual growth with fairness and I will not characterize a student by any single examination. I alone will develop or select the evaluations to be used in my coursework. My teaching will be driven by my students’ needs, not by any external impersonal criteria. I will work to know each student personally, knowing that the totality of a student’s abilities are beyond simple measures and that an examination is not an education.

I will continually update my knowledge in my discipline and in education in order to improve my effectiveness as a teacher. I alone will select my professional development. My school will fully support my professional decisions in self-improvement.

Any country with a future will fully support the teaching profession because all other professions depend upon teachers to educate their future professionals. For without professional teachers, a country has no future.

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

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