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The Rural Behavioral Health Region

The Rural Regional Behavioral Health Policy Board represents a six-county region in northeastern Nevada, which includes Elko, Eureka, Humboldt, Lander, Pershing, and White Pine Counties. The combined area of this region is slightly larger than the state of Mississippi, and the total population sits just under 100,000.

The large expanse of space covered by this region and the geographic distance to specialty services, influences many of the Board’s priorities.

Members

Chair, Fergus Laughridge, Health Director/Health Officer, Fort McDermitt Tribal Health Center ( Fort McDermitt Tribes and Huboldt County)

Other members of the Board in no particular order: 

Amy Adams, Certified Substance Abuse Counselor (White Pine County)

Amanda Osborne, Human Services Director (Elko County)

Dr. Erika Ryst, Child Psychologist (remote)

Bryce Shields, Pershing County District Attorney (Pershing County)

Steven Brotman, Director of Behavioral Health Services at Nevada Health Centers (remote)

Sarah Dearborn, Social Services Chief II at Nevada Medicaid (remote)

Brooke O’Byrne, representing the interests of behavioral health service users and their family members (remote, previously Humboldt County)

Senator Pete Goicoechea, representative of the Nevada Legislature (Eureka, Elko, White Pine, and other rural and frontier counties outside the Board’s region)

Jeri Sanders, Peace Officer I (Eureka County)

Matt Walker, CEO of William Bee Ririe Hospital (White Pine County)

Sean Burke, Director of Lander County EMS (Lander County)

 

Board Priorities

Rural Regional Behavioral Health Policy Board’s 2021 Priorities:

  • Transportation to and from behavioral health services, both in crisis and sub-acute conditions
  • Improved Medicaid and Medicare reimbursement rates for behavioral health services
  • Behavioral health workforce development, including filling provider gaps and ensuring high-quality care
  • Improved quality of behavioral health data
  • Improved interagency communication and partnership
  • Develop and improve access to high-quality services for Youth, Elder, and Minority groups
  • Improved quality and access to Veterans’ services
Gaps & Needs

The primary gaps and needs of the Rural Region include:

  • Mental health crisis stabilization centers.
  • Expanded transportation to and from both crisis facilities and outpatient behavioral health care. Currently, most transportation to crisis care outside of the community is facilitated by law enforcement or EMS, which may cause a community safety issue if those services are needed in the home community. While there are some options for outpatient transportation, they may not fit with a patient’s urgent care plan, may be expensive, may have to be scheduled too far in advance, or may not get the patient to/from care in a timely manner. 
  • Appropriate numbers of behavioral health providers to meet community needs. This includes LMFTs, CPCs, LCSWs, Psychologists, Psychiatrists, and all types of drug and alcohol counselors. 
  • Availability of care specifically for children and youth.
  • Safe and sober transitional housing in all communities for those in recovery.
Initiatives

The Rural Regional Behavioral Health Policy Board and the Rural Regional Behaviroal Health Coordinator are currently working with communities to identify appropriate initiatives to implement within the region. 

Recommendations

The Board has the following recommendations to the Commission on Behavioral Health and any other state agency affecting behavioral health services in the Rural Region:

  • Increase investments in Nevada Medicaid reimbursement for behavioral health services;
  • Increase resources and program choices to address the needs of high-risk populations, including youth, the elderly, and ethnic or racial minority groups;
  • Support programs that assist and support service members, veterans, and their families (SMVF) in a way that is competent to military culture;
  • Support programs and funding that would increase the number of behavioral health providers across the state of Nevada;
  • Support novel behavioral health transportation solutions and pilot programs.

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CALENDAR OF EVENTS

october, 2024

Publications and Reports

TypeGroupNameRegionDateDownload
Best Practices, Criminal Justice System (CJS), F.A.S.T.T., MOSTNevada Behavioral Health Programming Across the Sequential Intercept Model (SIM) v. 1.0Nevada Statewide, Northern, Rural, Southern07/23/2024
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Advocacy, Education, Legislation, Report UploadsBeHERE NV Annual Legislative Report FY2024Nevada Statewide, Rural06/27/2024
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Board Reports2023 Annual Report: Rural Regional Behavioral Health Policy BoardRural06/27/2024
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Board MeetingAgenda, Rural Regional Behavioral Health Policy Board Meeting April 5, 2024Nevada Statewide, Rural04/01/2024
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DataDOSE Report – Aug ’22 – Rural RegionRural09/12/2022
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Advocacy, Board Reports, DataRural RBHPB 2021 Annual ReportRural03/24/2022
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LegislationSB 44 – As Enrolled – 2021 Nevada Legislative SessionRural09/21/2021
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Contact

Valerie Cauhape Haskin, MA, MPH
Rural Regional Behavioral Health Coordinator The Family Support Center
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