Skip Maine state header navigation

Agencies | Online Services | Help

Skip First Level Navigation | Skip All Navigation

Home > About Us > Director's Corner

Photo of Kimberly JohnsonDirector's Corner

Director's Update - Fall 2006

Kimberly A. Johnson, Director

We are excited to have received two grants this fall that will help us transform the way treatment services are delivered. The first, the STAR-SI grant from the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment and the federal Department of Health and Human Services, will expand the efforts we began in January to use business process improvement techniques to increase access and retention. Eleven agencies are currently involved in this project and we will add six more over the course of the coming year. The first state-wide change project that we are undertaking is for all eleven agencies to provide assessment on demand rather than scheduling appointments with a goal of increasing the number of people who complete the first step of the treatment process. As I write, we are collecting pre-change data to use as baseline. The change project will begin on October 23.

The second grant comes from the Robert Wood Johnson foundation and is called Advancing Recovery. The goal of this grant is to change state bureaucratic processes and work with provider organizations to increase the use of evidenced-based practice. We have chosen two evidenced-based practices on which to focus our efforts. The first is the expansion of medication assisted therapies not just for opiate addiction, but also to treat addiction to other drugs including alcohol. The second is to expand outreach and wrap services for special populations including refugees and families involved with the child welfare system.

We see these two grants as synergistic. As the first grant changes business practices to open access and bring more people into treatment that previously were unable to maneuver the barriers, the second grant supports the clinical changes necessary to better serve the new people showing up for treatment. Both of these grants will force us to take a hard look at state regulation that may inhibit access and the use of evidenced-based practices, and OSA has made a commitment to the funders to change the practices identified as barriers.

OSA has been an active participant in the public health work group’s efforts to design Maine’s public health infrastructure. This group and its many subcommittees have worked diligently to design a system that is right for Maine. Osa will continue to work with other partners to support this infrastructure in various ways as it is further developed. For more information on the Public Health Workgroup, visit www.maine.gov/dhhs/boh/phwg/phwg.htm.

From OSA’s perspective this effort supports the other system transformation we are attempting which is funded by another federal grant from the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. We are using data to choose our funding priorities and have learned from other public health efforts that we will get the most bang from our buck by supporting a public health strategy or what is frequently called environmental strategies. We are looking at the risks in the environment that affect all citizens and developing interventions that are effective across a broad spectrum of the population rather than focusing on individual risk and resiliency as we have in the past. Research has shown that in order to make population level changes we need to focus on population level techniques. This is a 180° shift for our field and we have asked a lot from providers, but they are taking the challenge on with relish and excited about some of our early results. For example, in looking at our most recent school survey data, alcohol and drug use continue to decrease across all age groups from 6th through 12th grade. Lifetime use of alcohol for 6th through 12th graders in Maine has decreased by 16% since 2000. In 2000 just over half of eight graders had already tried alcohol, by 2006 that number was down to just under 37%, a decrease of 27%!

In other efforts that are shared with the ME CDC&P, we have completed the transition to using one data collection tool for all of our prevention providers. Thanks to OSA staff Geoff Miller and Chris Baumgartner, the system development and training necessary to help the Healthy Maine Partnerships shift to using the KIT Solutions software went smoothly, or at least appeared smooth to all involved.

Finally, in January our HIV-AIDs contractors will have one DHHS contract for HIV-AIDs prevention as OSA again joins forces with the ME CDC&P to reduce paperwork and provide better oversight for these jointly funded programs. Now they will have one contract and one budget and one quarterly report to file and we will manage information flow between the two offices behind the scenes.

Thank you for visiting our website. Please email us at osa.ircosa.maine.gov if you need assistance accessing any information. We are here to make Maine a healthier, safer place.

 

Previous Updates

What's New - Spring 2006

What's New - Fall 2005

What's New - Summer 2005

What's New - Spring 2005

What's New - Winter 2005

What's New - Summer 2004

What's New - Spring 2004

What's New - August 2003

What's New - January 2003

What's New - August 2002