24 Miss. Code. R. 2-32.17 - Intensive Community Support Services - General
A.
Intensive Community Support Services (ICSS) are designed to be a key part of
the continuum of mental health services and supports for people (adults and
children/youth) with serious mental illness or emotional disturbance.
B. ICSS must promote independence and quality
of life through the coordination of appropriate services and the provision of
constant and on-going support as needed by the person.
C. The Intensive Community Support Specialist
must have direct involvement with the person and must attempt to develop a
caring, supportive relationship with the person.
D. ICSS must be responsive to a person's
multiple and changing needs, and must play a pivotal role in coordinating
required services across systems to decrease the need for inpatient
treatment/hospitalization.
E. ICSS
must help the person function in the least restrictive, most natural community
environment and achieve an improved quality of life by helping the person to
achieve their recovery goals.
F.
ICSS must be provided according to fidelity, as determined by DMH.
G. ICSS is a comprehensive and complex
service that involves:
1. Outreach and
referrals;
2. Frequent assessment
and planning;
3. Frequent direct
services provision/intervention;
4.
Frequent monitoring, evaluation and follow-up; and
5. Information, liaison, advocacy,
consultation, and collaboration.
H. Staffing Requirements:
1. There must be at least one (1) full-time
(40 hours per week) Intensive Community Support Specialist providing services.
Additional staff, if needed, can be part-time to the service.
2. ICSS must be provided by a Mental Health
Professional who holds a DMH Certified Community Support Specialist credential
and has at least two (2) years of mental health direct care experience. ICSS
may also be provided by an employee who holds either:
(1) a DMH therapist credential (as
appropriate to the population served); or
(2) a professional license.
3. Overall supervision of the ICSS
staff must be carried out only by a mental health professional who holds
either:
(1) a DMH Mental Health Therapist
credential; or
(2) a professional
license, and has at least three (3) years of mental health direct care
experience.
4. A
full-time (40 hours per week) Intensive Community Support Specialist's caseload
must not be more than 20 people. A part-time (at least 20 hours per week)
Intensive Community Support Specialist's caseload must not be more than 10
people.
I. Service
Provision Requirements:
1. The Intensive
Community Support Specialist must have seventy-five to eighty-five percent
(75-85%) of Intensive Community Support work and contact time in a community
setting. ICSS are for adults and children and youth with intensive needs which
traditional outpatient services have not been successful in treating.
2. The Intensive Community Support Specialist
must coordinate with the people, family, and the facility personnel while
people are in inpatient psychiatric care (which includes state operated
facilities, private facilities, crisis stabilization units, designated holding
facilities, detention centers, or jail), to develop and coordinate an aftercare
plan.
3. The agency's Intensive
Community Support Specialist will act as the primary contact
("single-point-of-entry") for the inpatient facility discharging someone into
the agency's catchment area.
4. The
Intensive Community Support Specialist must identify unmet needs of the person
in the community and develop a plan to address those identified
needs.
5. The Intensive Community
Support Specialist must coordinate very closely with Crisis Response Services
and Mobile Crisis Response Teams and attend the MAP Team and AMAP team meetings
for the agency to ensure continuity of care. Attendance should only be required
if a person on their caseload is being reviewed by the MAP/AMAP Team. The
Intensive Community Support Specialist will assist with the development of a
Crisis Support Plan, as required by DMH.
6. When the person is ready to be discharged
from ICSS, the Intensive Community Support Specialist must coordinate with
typical mental health services in the person's community to transition the
person using the "warm hand-off method" into less intensive mental health
services.
Notes
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