BHECN receives national innovation award

Howard Liu, M.D.

A national non-profit organization dedicated to behavioral health care has bestowed its Innovation Award on the Behavioral Health Education Center of Nebraska (BHECN) in recognition of the outstanding work the center does in addressing the behavioral workforce needs in Nebraska.
 
"The innovative leadership BHECN has provided in developing strategies to deliver behavioral telehealth and integrated care training, curriculum development and outcomes research, as well as providing funding for behavioral health trainees across disciplines attests to the dedication the center has to the citizens of Nebraska," said Gail Stuart, Ph.D., executive director of the Annapolis Coalition on the Behavioral Health Workforce and distinguished university professor at the Medical University of South Carolina.
 
"This award means a great deal to us because we were inspired by the principles of the Annapolis Coalition when we were designing our workforce center," said Howard Liu, M.D., director of BHECN and interim chair of the University of Nebraska Medical Center Department of Psychiatry.
 
Since 2009, Dr. Liu said the center has worked with dozens of training programs, government agencies, providers, consumers and trainees who believe in the vision of providing compassionate care to rural and urban communities. 
 
"Along the way, we have increased the licensed behavioral health providers in Nebraska by 15 percent. That means better access for families when a child has anxiety or a parent is ready to get help for addiction," he said.
 
The Annapolis Coalition on the Behavioral Health Workforce is a national non-profit organization dedicated to improving behavioral health care by strengthening the mental health and addiction workforce.
 
Dr. Stuart said the coalition found BHECN’s work in collecting, analyzing and disseminating behavioral health workforce data, including identifying trends and future priorities, particularly noteworthy and a model for other states in the nation.
 
"The multiple reports and dashboard maps they have created and the data gathered to inform workforce best practices, attests to the work that BHECN has done to not only identify shortage areas, but then target resources to train, recruit and retain behavioral health providers to meet the need of the citizens of Nebraska," she said.
 
BHECN was created in 2009 when the Nebraska legislature passed LB 603 to address the statewide crisis in mental health access. Since then, BHECN has received two national awards and is considered a best practice for innovative programs to recruit and retain licensed mental health professionals in rural and urban communities. Housed at UNMC, BHECN has a unique partnership with all of the graduate behavioral health training programs in Nebraska and is dedicated to improving access to behavioral health care across the state. For more information about BHECN, visit www.unmc.edu/bhecn or follow it on Facebook and Twitter.
 
To accomplish their goals, BHECN has: 

  • Created behavioral health education and training sites in the six behavioral health regions;
  • Provided behavioral health telehealth training to support practitioners throughout the state;
  • Developed behavioral health training materials on evidence-based practices;
  • Supported rotations of psychiatry residents and other behavioral health trainees in rural and underserved communities; and
  • Collected, analyzed and disseminated behavioral health workforce data.

We are Nebraska Medicine and UNMC. Our mission is to lead the world in transforming lives to create a healthy future for all individuals and communities through premier educational programs, innovative research and extraordinary patient care.
 
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