Rain in forecast tonight

Skies will be cloudy today with a high near 41. The temperature was 34 at 9 a.m.

Areas of drizzle this morning fell to the east and south of Kansas City, Kan.

Tonight, there is a 90 percent chance of rain after 1 a.m. The low will be 38.

On Friday, expect a 100 percent chance of rain and a high near 47, winds will become 5 mph from the east in the morning.

Friday night, rain is likely before 7 p.m. Skies will be mostly cloudy with a low around 34. A north wind will be from 6 to 8 mph. The chance of rain will be 60 percent..

Saturday, it will be partly sunny with a high near 40, and wind from 6 to 8 mph.

Saturday night, the skies will be mostly cloudy with a low near 31.

Sunday’s forecast is mostly cloudy, and a high near 45. Sunday night, it will be mostly cloudy with a low around 35.

On Monday, skies will be mostly sunny, with a high near 46. Monday night, the low will be 31.

KDADS suspends voluntary admissions to Osawatomie State Hospital

Move coincides with ‘critical census challenges’ at facility for mentally ill
by Dave Ranney, KHI News Service

Topeka — The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services has suspended voluntary admissions to Osawatomie State Hospital, one of the state’s two inpatient facilities for people with serious mental illnesses.

The decision, according to a memo sent to the state’s 26 community mental health centers late Tuesday afternoon, was driven by “ongoing and critical census challenges” at the state hospital. The memo also outlined procedures for handling patients who are involuntary admitted.

In recent months, the 206-bed hospital has admitted record and near-record numbers of patients, causing dozens of patients to be triple-bunked in rooms meant for two.
Last month, federal health officials announced that surveyors sent to the hospital in October had found that its services were “not … sufficient to meet the needs of its patients.”

KDADS officials were warned that if the hospital’s deficiencies were not corrected, it would not be paid for Medicare services provided to patients admitted after Dec. 8.
KDADS filed a correction plan with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services regional office in Kansas City in mid-November. Neither the survey nor the correction plan have been released to the public.

Federal surveyors returned to the hospital Monday.

“They are re-surveying the problem spots and determining (whether) we’ve addressed them and that situation has been rectified,” KDADS spokesperson Angela de Rocha said Wednesday.

De Rocha said the surveyors were aware of the department’s decision to suspend voluntary admissions.

The decision, she said, is allowed by state statute.

It’s not yet known how many would-be patients will be denied admission.

“It shouldn’t be a significant number,” de Rocha said. “It’s not going to have a significant impact on our census challenges, but at this point every little bit helps.”

According to the memo, would-be patients will be denied admission “if their sole diagnosis is anti-social personality syndrome, substance use disorder, or an organic mental disorder such as trauma or dementia.”

Community mental health centers will not be allowed to send patients to the hospital until an on-duty physician has reviewed their records and agreed to admit them.

The new policy will be in effect for as long as the hospital’s census exceeds 185 patients.

Typically, patients who are involuntarily admitted to the hospital have been involved in altercations with police and have been deemed a danger to themselves or others.

Kyle Kessler, executive director at the Association of Community Mental Health Centers of Kansas, called the change in policy “a real concern,” adding that neither he nor his members were consulted about its potential impact on patients or the centers.

“This is a decision that the state made and that we didn’t have any input into,” Kessler said. “But the CMHCs will continue to do everything they can to treat people in their home communities.”

Between 2007 and 2012, state-funded support for a grant program that the centers use to offset the costs of treating the uninsured has dropped from $31 million a year to $10.9 million. Lawmakers last year agreed to set aside an additional $5 million for the program.

The state’s mental health advocates have long argued that community-based services for the mentally ill are significantly underfunded. And the decision to suspend voluntary admissions at Osawatomie, they say, will only make a bad situation worse.

“This just underlines the crisis that we have in mental health care in the state of Kansas,” said Rick Cagan, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness-Kansas. “There are solutions out there that have been talked about for years, but for whatever reason we, as a state, keep putting off the decision for making the appropriate investment in our mental health system. And then we keep closing our options for people who’ve gotten to a point where they really need inpatient treatment.”

Expecting the community mental health centers to take on volunteer-admission patients who, prior to Tuesday, would have been admitted to the hospital is unrealistic, Cagan said.

“Do we think community mental health centers ought to be doing a better job? Yes, we do,” Cagan said. “Do we think they have the resources they need to provide more robust services? No, we don’t.”

Keith Tully, chair of the board of directors of the Elizabeth Layton Center for mental health services in Paola, agreed.

“If the hospital isn’t going to admit people who need to be there and who’ve agreed to go there, then it’s going to put more pressure on us, more pressure on law enforcement, and more stress on families that are having to cope with someone who, say, has depression or is suicidal,” Tully said. “We’re in a crisis situation, and now what we hear is how the Legislature is going to have to cut spending. What’s happening, I think, is irresponsible.”

Greg Hennen is executive director at the Four County Mental Health Center in Independence, Kan. He said the directive will leave the centers in southeast Kansas with few good options after several hospitals in the region have closed their inpatient mental health units.

He said the closure of inpatient psychiatric treatment centers in Bartlesville, Okla., and, in recent years, in Pittsburg and Coffeyville have left community mental health centers with no place to send patients who need more intensive care.

“We’ve lost 47 private beds over the last five or six years,” Hennen said.

Hennen said when his center could refer patients to area hospitals, Osawatomie was a “last resort.” But with those inpatient beds no longer available, he said, the state hospital had become “our only resource.”

Asked about the impact of the state directive, he said: “It’s going to be chaos for a while.”

Commenting on the requirement that community mental health centers get prior approval from state psychiatrists before referring “involuntary patients,” Hennen said: “The jails will start to get full.”

The KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute. It is supported in part by a variety of underwriters. The News Service is committed to timely, objective and in-depth coverage of health issues and the policy-making environment. All News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution, including a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online. More about the News Service is at khi.org/newsservice or contact 785-233-5443.
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KCKCC joins with area organizations to offer ‘Business Basics 4 Boomers’

by Kelly Rogge

The Workforce Development and Entrepreneurship Center at Kansas City Kansas Community College, AARP in Kansas City and Next Chapter Kansas City, a program of Shepherd’s Center of Kansas City, Kan., have joined together to offer a business course targeted toward the Baby Boomer generation.

“Business Basics 4 Boomers” will be from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12, at KCKCC’s Dr. Thomas R. Burke Technical Education Center, 6565 State Ave.

The Jewish Heritage Foundation is providing funds to help cover the costs of the conference.

The registration fee for the conference is $15 per person or $10 for members of Next Chapter Kansas City, SEEN (Sustainable Enterprise and Entrepreneurship Network) and the Prime Time Club. The registration deadline is Dec. 9. Registration can be completed online at www.eventbrite.com/e/business-basics-4-boomers-tickets-14417710761.

People at all stages of starting a business and those who are just considering the idea can attend. While the event targets the Baby Boomer generation, younger people can also participate.

The half-day conference will consist of a panel of successful business owners as well as a panel of representatives from business resource organizations, who will share experience, information and advice for the “encore entrepreneur.”

Encore entrepreneurs are the growing number of persons who are seeking to launch income-generating ventures that make a positive difference in their communities after leaving their primary career or in anticipation of doing so.

The business owners’ panel will be moderated by Charley Vogt, senior vice president of business-economic development with Country Club Bank. Panel members will include Joyce Moore, owner of Goin Postal; Tim Ney, owner-operator of Drive Kansas and Doug Danforth, founder and CEO of Links-It.

The panel of business resource organizations will be moderated by Patricia Brown-Dixon, Region 7 Administrator for the U.S. Small Business Administration. Panelists include Elisa Waldman, with the Kansas Small Business Development Center; Kate Hodel with KCSource Link; Debra Ramsey, with the Small Business Administration and a representative from Kansas City SCORE – Chapter 19.

In addition, conference attendees will have the opportunity to visit booths from a variety of business resource organizations. Lunch is included with Mike Peters, life coach and owner of Interaction Coaching. He will be speaking on the topic, “How to Get Unstuck: Getting Back on Track with Your Passion.”

For more information, contact Karen Hostetler, Next Chapter Kansas City Director, at [email protected] or by calling 913-485-0975. Information is also available by contacting Tom Kelso at the KCKCC Workforce Development Office, 913-288-7644.

Kelly Rogge is the public information supervisor at Kansas City Kansas Community College.