No. Shared appointments would not meet the requirement. Alternative appointments need to be offered through telephone or other technology-supported mechanisms.
PCMH 2017
Yes. For pediatric populations, practices may identify children and youth with special health care needs who are defined by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Maternal and Child Health Bureau as children “who have or are at risk for chronic physical, developmental, behavioral or emotional conditions and who require health and related services of a type or amount beyond that required generally.”
PCMH 2017
Practices need to identify behavioral health-related criteria pertinent to their specific patient population such as a behavioral health diagnosis, substance use, a positive screening result from a standardized behavioral health screen, or psychiatric hospitalizations. If the practice feels that patients with temper tantrums is an identifier for patients in need of care management, the practice can use that defining criteria.
PCMH 2017
Yes, unhealthy behaviors can be the result of parent behavior but ultimately, we're looking for the unhealthy behaviors demonstrated by the patient (child). Secondhand smoke may be a direct example of a parent’s behavior affecting the child’s health and poor oral hygiene may be a child’s unhealthy behavior, but could result from lack of parental oversight or health literacy.
PCMH 2017
Practices must provide a documented process for staff to follow to ensure that demographic and clinical data are available for the specialist, and either a report/log or an example showing that the process is followed (e.g., a screen shot of available information and how the information is made available to the specialist). If external referrals are made, the practice must specify the process for sharing information with those providers, as well.
PCMH 2017
No. Although there is no requirement for a behavioral healthcare provider to be physically in the practice’s office, the behavioral healthcare provider must have at least partial access to the practice’s systems. Although the arrangements mentioned meet the intent of CC 09 (maintaining agreements with behavioral healthcare providers), they do not meet the requirements for this criterion.
If a practice site in an organization has integrated behavioral healthcare, the other sites in the organization may receive credit if there is also a process for their patients to access those behavioral healthcare services.
PCMH 2017
Practices are not restricted to referring patients only to practices with whom they have established agreements. NCQA reviews at least one example of a formal or informal agreement with a subset of specialists, but does not expect practices to have agreements with all specialists to whom they refer patients. The goal is that expectations are outlined in the agreement, in addition to expectations of timeliness/content of response from specialists.
PCMH 2017