NCDHHS Shares Strategies for Counties to Support Behavioral Health and Intellectual and Developmental Services during COVID-19 Crisis | Eastern NC Now

The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) shares recommended strategies to support local solutions to maintain and sustain services for individuals with behavioral health needs and intellectual and developmental disabilities

ENCNow
Press Release:

    RALEIGH     The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) shares recommended strategies to support local solutions to maintain and sustain services for individuals with behavioral health needs and intellectual and developmental disabilities along with reducing the burden on emergency departments and hospitals during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    NCDHHS has acted aggressively to create flexibilities designed to sustain and bolster the behavioral health and intellectual and developmental disability system during the COVID-19 emergency. With additional regulatory latitude in place, the proposed actions can be taken at the local level to assist in supporting services and mitigating the current health crisis. The strategies are directed at local government agencies, community organizations, local management entity/managed care organizations (LME/MCOs), behavioral health providers, hospitals in communities across the state and other partners.

    "A well-functioning behavioral health and intellectual and developmental disability system is essential to our health care system, now more than ever as we respond to the COVID-19 pandemic," said Kody Kinsley, Deputy Secretary for Behavioral Health and Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. "It's critical that partners coordinate effectively at the local level to develop solutions tailored to the needs and unique circumstances of communities."

    In addition to waivers and flexibilities granted at both the state and federal levels, NCDHHS has prioritized ensuring resources are available to meet immediate behavioral health and intellectual and developmental disability needs during the crisis.

    NCDHHS does not mandate actions at the local level but offers opportunities for collaboration. Strategies include ways to minimize the flow of patients to emergency departments, ideas to safely discharge a stabilized patient from a hospital, suggestions to manage jail and justice-involved populations, and options to meet non-medical drivers of health like housing, transportation, and food.

    Additional guidance specifically aimed at reducing the number of people in the hospital has also been released to stakeholders. The COVID-19 pandemic has created complications for caregivers accompanying their family members who have a cognitive or intellectual disabilities to medical and health care visits. The guidance focuses attention on individual's legal rights in the context of hospitals' infectious disease mitigation strategies and policies. It is important that rights are protected, appropriate care and treatment is delivered and public health is protected.

    Make sure the information you are getting about COVID-19 is coming directly from reliable sources like the CDC and NCDHHS. For the latest guidance from NCDHHS to stakeholders and the public, visit www.ncdhhs.gov/divisions/public-health/covid19/covid-19-guidance.

    For additional information, please visit the CDC's website at www.cdc.gov/coronavirus and NCDHHS' website at www.ncdhhs.gov/coronavirus, which includes daily updates on positive COVID-19 test results in North Carolina.


  • NC Department of Health and Human Services
  • 2001 Mail Service Center
  • Raleigh, NC 27699-2001
  • Ph: (919) 855-4840
  • news@dhhs.nc.gov

Go Back

HbAD0

Latest Health and Fitness

North Carolina could provide a scalable blueprint for integrating food into the health care system, following the success of NourishingWake, a program by NourishedRx.
A group seeking COVID-related records from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is urging the North Carolina Supreme Court to take its case.
The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services has received funding for the 2026 Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) from federal partners.
Republican leaders of the North Carolina General Assembly have rejected Gov. Josh Stein’s call for an extra legislative session dealing with Medicaid next week, calling the move unconstitutional and unnecessary.
State health officials are investigating a suspected case of infant botulism in North Carolina linked to a baby formula, which has now been recalled nationwide.
The NC General Assembly has wrapped the scheduled October session, but tensions are still running high between the chambers over a Medicaid rebase stalemate and its increasing sticker shock.
The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services and the North Carolina Social Work Coalition on Workforce Development are partnering to create a Public Service Leadership Program (PSLP) that will strengthen the state’s social work workforce.
Trump is expected to tie one medication as a potential cause of autism, and another as a potential treatment.

HbAD1

"Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a foolish man, full of foolish and vapid ideas," former Governor Chris Christie complained.
New state-of-the-art facility features 144 beds and a healing environment for behavioral health patients
Equity has replaced excellence, and Americans are worse off physically and intellectually.
The panel referred to pregnant women as "pregnant persons."

HbAD2

 
 
Back to Top