In response to numerous requests from Texas counties for guidance on the operation of jails during a pandemic, the Justice Policy Team at the Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute (MMHPI) developed a March 24, 2020…
Personal Protective Equipment & the Behavioral Health Workforce
The scarcity of coronavirus personal protective equipment (PPE) has been a concern for health care providers across the United States, and that definitely includes the many people who provide in-person services related to severe mental…
The scarcity of coronavirus personal protective equipment (PPE) has been a concern for health care providers across the United States, and that definitely includes the many people who provide in-person services related to severe mental illness, substance use disorder, and the intellectual and developmental disabilities community.
That’s why MMHPI is working with The Hackett Center for Mental Health, our dedicated regional program for the Texas Gulf Coast, to develop a series of briefings for policymakers highlighting the PPE needs of these dedicated front-line personnel, whose work is crucial to keeping a large number of Texans with intensive needs from being forced into already-overburdened hospitals and institutions.
While an increasing number of services are being provided via telehealth or other telephone-based care, Texans with more serious conditions must still be treated in person. Currently, these services are being delivered with little to no PPE, potentially exposing these workers to illness. A subset of the behavioral health workforce currently serving should be prioritized for use of personal protective equipment (PPE) as these workers must deliver certain critical in-person services in order to allow for these high-risk individuals with complex health needs to be served in the community, rather than already over-burdened hospitals, residential facilities, and justice facilities.
This can help ensure that patients are protected, and that their vital caregivers do not get sick or resign out of concern for their personal safety. The crucial services they provide must continue to be delivered, safely and uninterrupted, throughout this crisis.
The white paper below focuses on the need for personal protective equipment for the behavioral health and intellectual/developmental disability (IDD) workforce and is based on input from providers across Texas.