Pritzker Announces Recommendations
from Children’s Behavioral Health Transformation Initiative
Initiative proposes steps to strengthen
the delivery of behavioral and mental health services for Illinois
youth
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[April 04, 2023]
Governor
JB Pritzker has joined local, state, and community leaders to
release a new report from the Children’s Behavioral Health
Transformation Initiative, which will redesign the delivery of
behavioral health services for Illinois youth. The goal of the
Initiative is to transform statewide systems to provide clear,
consistent, and comprehensive guidance to families seeking
behavioral or mental health services for children and adolescents.
“Nearly a year ago, I announced the Children’s Behavioral Health
Transformation Initiative, which builds on the substantial progress
made by Illinois agencies to ensure that every young person
experiencing mental or behavioral health problems can access needed
services,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Through rate increases,
community networks, and inter-agency collaboration, we are taking a
multi-faceted, comprehensive approach to establish the number one
children’s behavioral healthcare system in the nation.”
“In Illinois, we put children first by developing policies and
partnerships that see each child, support every family, and provide
resources all across the state,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton.
“This blueprint for transformation is an innovative, collaborative
approach that will positively impact our most vulnerable youth in
all areas of behavioral health. Addressing challenges that impact
the wellbeing of our children, and providing them with information
and services that help, will strengthen our communities for
generations to come.”
The Transformation Initiative, launched in March 2022 by Governor
Pritzker in response to a nationwide youth mental health crisis,
evaluated the existing landscape for behavioral and mental health
services across the state, and outlined strategies and
recommendations to better serve Illinois’ youth and families. To
develop recommendations, the Initiative engaged hundreds of
stakeholders, analyzed dozens of statutes and policies, analyzed
administrative data, and researched best practices from states and
counties across the country.
Data were analyzed by Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago under
the leadership of Dr. Dana Weiner and in collaboration with the
Illinois Departments of Human Services (DHS), Healthcare and Family
Services (HFS), Children and Family Services (DCFS), Juvenile
Justice (DJJ), Public Health (DPH), and the Illinois State Board of
Education (ISBE) to develop a set of streamlined, accessible, and
responsive solutions for families.
The Initiative represents a collaborative,
multi-agency effort and delivers evidence-driven solutions to
accomplish five goals: adjusting capacity to ensure the right
resources are available to youth in need, streamlining processes to
make it easier for youth and families to access services,
intervening earlier to prevent crises from developing, increasing
accountability to ensure we have a transparent system, and
developing agility so that the system can adjust to meet the
evolving needs of youth.
The Initiative builds on the strengths of Illinois’ behavioral
health system. By taking an interagency, data-driven, comprehensive
approach, the Pritzker administration is creating an Illinois where
every child and family can thrive.
“With unprecedented collaboration from the child-serving state
agencies, provider partners, and stakeholders across Illinois, we
have developed a Blueprint that can unify us and guide our efforts
to improve the children’s behavioral health service system,” said
Dana Weiner, PhD., Director of the Children’s Behavioral Health
Transformation Initiative. “Together, we can work toward a future
where all kids have access to the services they need to be healthy,
happy, and strong.”
“Chapin Hall brings research and decades of policy expertise to
every challenge. Interest has never been higher in changing policy
to ensure equal outcomes for all children,” said Chapin Hall
Executive Director Bryan Samuels. “We are proud to work alongside
Governor Pritzker’s office to implement new evidence-based policies
that can create a very different world – one where systems support
and protect families as they navigate difficult social and economic
conditions and seek the best for their children.”
To accomplish its five goals, the Blueprint presents 12
recommendations—including creating a centralized resource for
families seeking services for children, increasing capacity to serve
more children and families, and building the workforce using direct
support paraprofessionals and supporting other roles with incentives
and creative approaches to credentialing.
“Across state agencies, we are working together to build a strong
and solid foundation for young people in Illinois,” said Grace Hou,
Secretary, Illinois Department of Human Services. “This important
work will transform the children’s behavioral health service system
to increase and improve access and to provide clear, consistent, and
comprehensive guidance to families seeking behavioral and mental
health services for children and youth in their care.”
“Investment in our state’s youth through a holistic, whole-child
approach provides them with the key resources and support they need
to succeed,” said Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford
(D-Maywood). “We are taking a positive step toward ensuring families
of children who struggle with severe behavior health needs are
uplifted and have access to the high-quality care they deserve.”
“The value of the blueprint announced by the Governor with the
Children's Behavioral Health Officer cannot be overstated,” said
State Senator Sara Feigenholtz (D-Chicago). “This work has the
promise of being the most transformative accomplishment for children
in the history of our state. If done correctly, it will organically
connect with the Governor’s bold early childhood education Smart
Start Illinois plan.”
“Families with children who need mental health services can often
feel like they are entering a complex maze when trying to find the
best care for their children,” said State Senator Karina Villa (D-
West Chicago). “This transformation blueprint will provide families
the map they need to navigate the systems available to them.”
"Illinois has struggled for far too long with maintaining a
well-resourced children's behavioral health system, including both
residential beds and the stable workforce necessary to provide
care,” said State Rep. Lindsey LaPointe (D-Chicago). “No family
should have to send their child out of state in a time of acute
crisis. This plan will provide our kids and families with what they
need right here in Illinois."
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“Our state’s most vulnerable
youth deserve wraparound support that puts them on a path to a
better tomorrow,” said State Senator Elgie R. Sims, Jr.
(D-Chicago). “Today we have built upon our strong foundation to
put forth a coordinated strategy that will allow us to better
uplift families with children who have severe behavioral health
needs.” The public
children’s behavioral health system in Illinois includes the
Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS), Illinois Department of
Healthcare and Family Services (HFS), the Department of Children and
Family Services (DCFS), the Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ),
the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE), and the Illinois
Department of Public Health (DPH).
“HFS is committed to ensuring that Illinois Medicaid helps families
succeed. You can see this commitment through our efforts to increase
payments to providers, introduce new services, and re-think parts of
Medicaid,” HFS Director Theresa Eagleson said. “We are committed to
working with our sister agencies to advance the Transformation
Initiative and to continue to expand capacity and broaden access to
high-quality behavioral health services to improve outcomes for
children and their families, and ultimately, to improve lives.”
“Ensuring the children we care for are not only safe,
but thriving, is a tremendous responsibility. The launch of the
Transformation Initiative sets in motion immediate and meaningful
action to transform how Illinois serves the youth and families who
need us most,” said DCFS Director Marc E. Smith. “We are radically
changing the way we collectively address behavioral health services
in Illinois and will, along with other benefits, providing equitable
and easy access to care for every family that needs it.”
“As the Director of the Illinois
Department of Juvenile Justice and a parent, I am grateful to
Governor Pritzker for taking action to address the unprecedented
behavioral health crisis our children face here in Illinois and
around the country, especially in the wake of COVID-19,” said Heidi
Mueller, Director at Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice. “After
more than a year of intensive multi-agency collaboration, Dr. Weiner
has produced a blueprint for transformation that includes innovative
yet practical solutions to make sure Illinois children and their
families have access to the behavioral health care they need, and
aligns closely with the goals of IDJJ’s own 21st Century
Transformation plan. We at IDJJ are excited to be part of the
Children’s Behavioral Health Transformation team and are eager to do
our part to make the blueprint recommendations a reality for
Illinois kids and families.”
“Any student in need of behavioral health treatment deserves access
to quality care, and it is essential that parents, educators, and
school districts know how to help them receive that care. The
Transformation Initiative will serve as both map and key for
connecting this vulnerable group of students to critical resources,”
said State Superintendent of Education Dr. Tony Sanders. “ISBE is
proud to join interagency efforts to put this visionary program into
action and looks forward to improving service and coordination for
youth across Illinois.”
“As a pediatrician, I have seen firsthand the unprecedented
behavioral health challenges our children are facing,” said IDPH
Director Dr. Sameer Vohra. “The Children’s Behavioral Health
Transformation Initiative addresses these challenges head on with a
bold, multi-agency effort to redesign how we deliver services to
children and families in Illinois. I applaud Governor Pritzker for
prioritizing the issue of children’s behavioral health, and IDPH is
committed to partnering across government to deliver solutions. This
focus on the health of our children is critical to building the
brightest futures for all our communities.”
Governor Pritzker’s administration launched several initiatives over
the past few years to improve healthcare access for children and
families across the state. Last November, the IDPH-led Illinois
Pediatric Mental Health Care Access Expansion was rolled out. The
federally funded program is designed to help pediatricians and other
providers meet children’s mental health needs by strengthening
mental health services in hospital emergency departments and
schools. The effort is a partnership involving IDPH, HFS and DHS
plus the University of Illinois Chicago’s DocAssist Program and the
Illinois Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics (ICAAP).
In December 2022, HFS began to introduce the Pathways
to Success initiative across Illinois. Pathways to Success will help
children with complex mental health conditions, and their families,
navigate the children’s mental health system. Additionally, Pathways
allows HFS to introduce new services and supports such as intensive
in-home services, family peer support, individual and therapeutic
supports, and respite for children. These new Pathways services have
shown success in other states helping children remain safe, at home,
and in their communities. HFS’ increased investment in traditional
behavioral health services and continued efforts to introduce new
elements of the Pathways to Success initiative will provide the
Transformation Initiative a strong foundation to build upon.
The Pritzker administration has also worked to build out a full
continuum of care for youth with investments in the FY24 budget. A
total of $10 million is being invested in a two-year expansion of
Comprehensive Community Based Youth Services for youth aged 11 to 17
who are at risk of involvement in the child welfare system or the
juvenile justice system. This funding will better equip these
organizations to provide 24/7 services to youth — including
assessments, crisis stabilization, and housing — while assisting the
critical work of DCFS staff. This $10 million is part of a total of
$22.8 million that the budget dedicates to jump start the
recommendations in the Blueprint.
A plan for accomplishing the Children’s Behavioral Health
Transformation Initiative recommendations will be submitted to the
Governor in October 2023 to guide ongoing work.
For more information and to view the report,
click here.
[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |