Utah Admin. Code R523-18-5 - Minimum Guidelines and Standards of Care
(1) Mobile crisis services provide a timely
in-person response to a crisis in the community. Mobile crisis services shall
collaborate with local and statewide crisis line services, and any additional
crisis response services, including the stabilization and mobile response
services if available.
(2) When a
MCOT is dispatched from the statewide crisis line, the statewide crisis line
staff shall provide whenever possible the:
(a) the name of individual in
crisis,
(b) their date of
birth,
(c) the presenting problem
as demonstrated through the individual's current behaviors),
(d) the location of the individual needing
services,
(e) any history of
violence and/or substance use,
(f)
the presence of any weapons and/or dogs in the house, and
(g) the need for a coordination plan to
include police assistance, and/or family's willingness to helping coordinate
services while accounting for all relevant safety and security issues, so the
MCOT can provide a timely face to face response.
(3) When law enforcement requests response
from a MCOT, and is staying on scene, it is important to provide as rapid as a
response as possible which may mean, responding to the crisis with limited
information.
(4) A MCOT must have
the capacity to:
(a) intervene wherever the
crisis occurs,
(b) serve
individuals unknown to the system,
(c) coordinate multiple simultaneous requests
for services and,
(d) work closely
with police, EMS, Fire, dispatch, crisis hotlines, schools, hospital emergency
departments, and other related agencies.
(5) A MCOT must operate 24 hours per day, 7
days per week, and 365 days per year in providing community-based crisis
intervention, screening, assessment, and referrals to appropriate
resources.
(6) In screening the
individual in crisis, the MCOT must collect at least the following information:
(a) identifying information,
(b) the chief complaint/presenting
problem,
(c) acute medical concerns
and chronic health conditions, and
(d) current healthcare providers.
(7) The MCOT must administer an
ongoing assessment, if clinically indicated by the initial screening, that
shall include:
(a) any imminent danger to the
individual in crisis through potentially lethal means of harm to one's self or
others.
(b) risk for suicide using
the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS)or another empirically
validated instrument,
(c) the
individual's emotional status and imminent psychosocial needs,
(d) individual strengths and available coping
mechanisms,
(e) resources that can
increase service participation and success, and
(f) the most appropriate and least
restrictive service alternative for the individual, and the referral mechanisms
and procedures to access services.
(8) Following the assessment, if there is
risk for harm to self or others, the MCOT shall engage the person to establish
a crisis response plan using:
(a) Crisis
Response Planning (CRP),
(b)
Stanley Brown Safety Plan, or
(c)
another evidenced based safety plan/crisis prevention practice.
(9) If clinically indicated access
ER or other crisis receiving facility to address ongoing safety concerns and
for further evaluation.
(10) A MCOT
must be staffed by skilled and licensed mental health professionals.
(11) A MCOT must understand the emergency
civil commitment process as described in Section
62A-15-629, and one of the
members must be either a Designated Examiner or Mental Health Officer to
facilitate civil commitment should that be the indicated course of action for
the safety of the individual, family or the community.
(12) A MCOT will preferably utilize Certified
Peer Support Specialists and Family Resource Facilitators, in conjunction with
a Mental Health Therapist when deploying for mobile crisis outreach.
(13) A MCOT shall respond to individuals in
the community who are in crisis with the goal of resolving the crisis in the
least restrictive manner and setting, including:
(a) reducing inpatient treatment admissions
and Emergency Department visits if appropriate,
(b) increasing jail diversions, and
(c) reducing law enforcement involvement
while maintaining public safety.
(14) A MCOT shall collaborate with
stakeholders involved in the crisis service delivery system and partner to
resolve service delivery concerns.
(15) MCOT providers shall have a published
plan in place that outlines triage policies and coordination of crisis response
services with community stakeholders.
(a) The
plan shall address community collaboration with the following partners at
minimum:
(i) Local Mental Health and
Substance Abuse Authorities,
(ii)
SMR providers,
(iii) local law
enforcement,
(iv) fire
departments,
(v)
dispatch,
(vi) hospital emergency
departments,
(vii)
schools,
(viii) EMS,
(ix) Department of Human Services agencies,
and
(x) other social service
partners, including health plans and other crisis services in the local
community.
(16) The MCOT provider shall enter into MOU's
with each Local Mental Health and Substance Abuse Authority operating a crisis
line in their region, and the Statewide Crisis Line. The MOU shall include the
following elements at a minimum:
(a) data
sharing process between Statewide Crisis Line, Local Authority and MCOT
provider including data on number of callers from region MCOT serves,
(b) mobile deployments from the Statewide
Crisis Line,
(c) a clear procedure
for coordination between the Statewide Crisis Line and MCOT provider, for
deploying MCOT services for individuals in need of MCOT services who have
called into the Statewide Crisis Line,
(d) data and a process for warm hand offs
between Statewide Crisis Line, MCOT, and Local Authorities to support
individuals in ongoing services; and
(e) procedures for case consultation on
services, high utilizers, and collaboration.
Notes
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