CA:tCH Safety Plans
Coalitions that Adopted
Strategy Type
Community-based & Resources/AccessStrategy Goal
Reduce the need for crisis intervention and improve behavioral health outcomes for individuals and partner organizations by creating participant safety plans that allow for information sharing and teaming among trained project partners.Intended Population
The entire population of Ashland and Bayfield Counties (about 31,000 people).Strategy Background
Northern Wisconsin, like many sparsely populated regions, faces issues of low access and connectivity to care. Behavioral health services in the region are provided by a community health clinic, a critical access hospital, county health and human services, tribal health centers, and a number of small and private providers. With only one hospital containing a behavioral health unit across a seven-county region, there are limited beds, and the system is often overwhelmed. When those beds are full, patients in a behavioral health crisis must be transported across state lines to receive appropriate care or are placed in emergency detentions, creating a significant financial and psychological burden.
To address these challenges and decrease the rate of future mental health crises, the Resilience Alignment Beekeepers, a backbone organizing group, created Chequamegon Accountable: the Community for Health, an Accountable Community for Health (ACH) that worked to refine crisis response interventions in the area. By fostering collaboration between partner organizations across sectors, the coalition developed a system for information sharing, through a three-pronged process that involved preliminary discussions by the ACH, consultation with legal teams with expertise in Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) compliance, and ultimately the creation of the CA:tCH Safety Plan and Release of Information (ROI) documents.
The safety plan is a patient-centered framework for coordination across partner organizations that aims to address the behavioral health needs of the community and improve responses to behavioral health crises through the use of a shared information portal. This portal works within HIPAA, allowing for release of information and sharing between agencies, such as law enforcement and healthcare organizations. The process allows these organizations to legally and ethically view information chosen by the participant to best help them during a crisis.
Safety plan information is created and approved by patients, and the plan is designed to elicit information that will help build trusting connections with first responders, such as the participants’ sources of support, methods the individuals themselves identify as helpful for de-escalating distress, and other helpful information for law enforcement in the case of an emergency detention.
By building on existing safety plans used by various health agencies and partnering with the state-designated information exchange platform, Wisconsin Statewide Health Information Network (WISHIN), the coalition has been able to leverage existing support for behavioral health solutions into a new, feasible plan with the potential for long-term systems change.
"The CA:tCH Safety Plan represents a shift in how information sharing and teaming is done between key community stakeholders. When used successfully, this strategy can help save hundreds of thousands – if not millions – of dollars by reducing the need for expensive hospitalizations.”
Special Considerations
Strategy: Develop an Accountable Community for Health
Tip: Relationship building is about creating a space where organizations can answer the questions, “What don’t you like about the current behavioral health crisis process?” and “What do you wish worked better?”
Chapter 51 of the Wisconsin Statutes restricts availability of protected health information. This information can only be released to parties producing proper authorization and authority. In all other cases a court order is required to access this information.
Strategy: Consider Legal and Ethical Factors
Each member trained represents an average investment of five hours per person. In total 690 hours were committed to training workgroup partner agencies over 2 years.
“Without meeting with those people, we really have no idea what their perspectives are and what they bring to the table. So that’s the most valuable gain from sitting down with the diverse group and getting information to trouble shoot and strategize.”
Challenges and Tactics to Address Them
List of Challenges & Tactics
Best Practices
CA:tCH Statistics
Of the 97 CA:tCH plans made, 11% were made by participants under 18 years old and 24% were made by participants aged 55+.
Highlights/Select Work Product
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
CA:tCH Plan Facilitation
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
CA:tCH Plan Use and Follow-up
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
Using the WISHIN CA:tCH Portal
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
Using WISHIN Pulse
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
- (PDF)
Introduction to HIPAA
WISHIN CA:tCH Portal Training/Practice
- s (PDF)