Search Results for: "Recovery"

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2024 Behavioral Health Care Symposium

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

Join us at the Hyatt Regency Long Beach on December 4-5 for two days of relevant topics on behavioral health care in California from speakers you want to hear. If you thought the 2023 Symposium in Sacramento was good – just wait til this one. And this year you get to enjoy the great Pacific Ocean. Long Beach is a vacation destination so put this date on both your work and play calendars!

CDPH Updates Hospital and Skilled-Nursing Facility Visitation Order

On Feb. 7, the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) issued a State Public Health Officer Order to amend its order on Dec. 31, 2021, about hospital and skilled-nursing facility (SNF) indoor visitation. In effect, yesterday’s order rescinds the increased requirements for indoor visitation that were imposed on a temporary basis in response to the...

Valley Children’s Healthcare CEO Todd Suntrapak Elected 2023 Chair of California Hospital Association’s Board of Trustees

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

SACRAMENTO (January 12, 2023) — Todd Suntrapak, President and CEO of Valley Children’s Healthcare in Madera, has been elected 2023 chair of the California Hospital Association’s Board of Trustees. Suntrapak, who has been with Valley Children’s for more than 25 years, was named CEO in 2012 after serving in various leadership positions. He has championed the organization’s commitment to providing highly specialized and comprehensive pediatric care to 1.3 million children throughout California’s Central Valley.

2024 Emergency Services Forum

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

Join us for the 2024 Emergency Services Forum in beautiful Newport Beach. This conference is dedicated to the uniqueness of hospital ED management and its intersection with emergency services and the community.

CMS Updates Substance Use Disorder Data Book

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has updated its Substance Use Disorder (SUD) Data Book for Congress, as required by the Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recovery and Treatment Act. The data book uses 2018 Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System data. 

Hospitals Face Long, Hard Road Back to ‘Normal’


This week, the nation pauses to recognize, reflect upon, and respond to a crisis centuries in the making: The fact that the United States has the highest maternal mortality rate in the developed world, driven by the sad and unacceptable mortality rates among Black mothers, who are 2.5 times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than white women. 

Black Maternal Health Week, held annually in the middle of National Minority Health Month, presents a notable opportunity to not only take stock of where California sits in the efforts to reduce maternal health disparities, but also to listen and learn from the people who are suffering, including the most vulnerable: Black infants in the United States die at more than twice the rate of white infants

California is a national leader in the fight to reduce maternal deaths — the rate has been cut by 68% in the past decade and is well below the national average — but the numbers of Black moms dying are still far too high. 

That’s why it’s vital that we continue to build on the work hospitals are already doing to address this problem, including: 

The Hospital Quality Institute’s Perinatal Mental Health Learning Community
 is helping 145 enrolled hospitals strengthen their approaches to maternal mental health in the perinatal period through education, technical assistance, and peer support. 
More than 90% of California’s hospitals participate in the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative, which employs data, rapid response analysis, and comprehensive toolkits to improve health outcomes for mothers and infants.  
Many hospitals are engaging in anti-bias training to mitigate the effects of implicit bias on moms and babies. 
Cherished Futures for Black Moms and Babies, a collaboration among hospitals, community-based organizations, public health agencies, and health care workers supported by the Hospital Association of Southern California’s Communities Lifting Communities initiative is working to reduce Black infant mortality and improve Black maternal patient experiences in South Los Angeles and the Antelope Valley. 
 
More can and must be done.  
If there’s any silver lining to the COVID-19 crisis and recent heightened awareness of systemic racism, it’s that the conversations about longstanding health disparities are now front and center, and the forum to have uncomfortable discussions is here. 
As is the case with any issue that has layer upon layer of complexity and paths toward solution, honest and earnest dialogue will be the first step toward action that can effect meaningful, sustainable, and compassionate change.

HHS Announces Additional Block Grants to Address Substance Use Disorder and Mental Health Crisis

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has announced the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration is distributing $3 billion in American Rescue Plan funding. The Community Mental Health Services Block Grant (MHBG) program and Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant (SABG) program will disperse $1.5 billion each to states and territories.