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Barriers
to Integrated Treatment
There are a number of barriers that need to be addressed
to truly create integrated systems of care for people with
co-occurring
disorders. Some of these barriers include:
- Federal, state and local infrastructures that are generally
organized to respond to single disorders
- No single point of responsibility exists for treatment
and care coordination ****
- Mental health and substance abuse service systems often
vie for the same limited resources
- The funding mechanisms for the two systems are often
inflexible, difficult to navigate, and involve
a myriad of state, federal
and private sector payers with variable eligibility
requirements and benefit offerings that do not
encourage flexible,
creative financing ****
- A lack of any significant connection between mental health and substance abuse provider and service programs*****
- A shortage of training opportunities, creating a situation whereby too few staff are trained in treating both mental and substance abuse disorders*****
- Differing treatment philosophies in the mental health and substance abuse treatment fields*****
- A reluctance by clinicians to address co-occurring disorders, particularly when one of the disorders is in an area in which the clinician is untrained*****
- Co-occurring disorders are prominent
among chronically homeless people
and other groups
that are especially
hard-to-serve ****
- Too little research-based guidance for the treatment of people with less severe co-occurring disorders*****
**** From the National
Governor's Association on Best Practices
***** From SAMHSA's Strategies for Developing Treatment Programs for People with Co-Occurring Substance Abuse & Mental Health Disorders, (Adobe Acrobat PDF, 385 KB), Rockville, MD, 2003
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