As CTC-RI continues encouraging RI provider participation in the Larry A. Green Center / Primary Care Collaborative 3-minute clinician surveys to better understand the response and capacity of the US primary care practices through COVID-19, results are being shared from the survey fielded November 13-17.
On November 19, CTC-RI, in collaboration with the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH), hosted a meeting with numerous stakeholders that reflected on the past three years of work supporting Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT).
Please save the date for the CTC-RI Quarterly Breakfast of Champions. All Clinical Practice Champions and practice site clinical and administrative leaders are expected to attend.
Friday, December 11, 7:30-9:00am
To help address the behavioral health needs of perinatal patients during COVID-19, the RI Dept.
The Care Delivery Design project supported by the CSC has continued to make progress on a “core competencies in PC capitation best practices” document for pediatric and adult care. An online practice and system of care capitation readiness self-assessment document has been produced which participating practices and SOC have begun to complete.
The December 11 CTC-RI/PCMH Kids Breakfast of Champions hosted almost 80 participants representing clinical practice champions and practice site clinical and administrative leaders. There was a presentation to cover the following topics:
The mission of CTC-RI is to support the continuing transformation of primary care in Rhode Island as the foundation of an ever-improving integrated, accessible, affordable, and equitable health care system. CTC-RI brings together critical stakeholders to implement, evaluate and spread effective multi-payer models to deliver, pay for and sustain high-quality, comprehensive, accountable primary care.