Archived Meetings
2018
Mobile Response & Stabilization Services Peer Meeting ▾
Date: May 23-24, 2018
Location: Piscataway, New Jersey
Description: In this cooperative peer convening, (up to eight) participant teams will gather to learn about innovative ‘best practice’ models of mobile response and stabilization services (MRSS) that include home- and community-based stabilization and case management services, on-site face-to-face therapeutic response; assessment; crisis intervention and stabilization; psychiatric consultation; psychopharmacology; and referrals and linkages to other services and supports. Participant teams will gather in New Jersey for two days of collaborative work with peers, and experts from Connecticut, Milwaukee County Wisconsin, Nevada, New Jersey, and Oklahoma, to work on self-identified goals and strategies for developing, implementing and sustaining MRSS for children, youth, and young adults in their states and communities. There will also be an opportunity for 1-2 individuals from each participating team to shadow a mobile response team for 'hands-on' observation of New Jersey's approach, the day before the meeting begins.
2017
System of Care Support Grantee Meeting ▾
Dates: May 22-23, 2017
Location: Rockville, MD
Description: This 2-day meeting is open to communities, states, tribes and territories with cooperative agreements awarded under the Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services for Children and their Families Program (also known as the Children's Mental Health Initiative or CMHI). It is designed for grantees to invite state or local agency partners (e.g., Medicaid, child welfare, juvenile justice, education), staff, and stakeholders, such as family members, youth, providers, legislators, and judges, who are less familiar with system of care practices, principles, essential components and the strategic framework necessary for designing, implementing, sustaining, and expanding effective systems of care. The meeting is intended for those who are critical to the development and expansion of systems of care at state and local levels, who do not have a strong knowledge base about systems of care and would benefit from a 2-day intensive system of care immersion. This SAMHSA sponsored learning opportunity count towards the annual grantee training requirement.
Mobile Response & Stabilization Services Peer Meeting ▾
Date: December 5-6, 2017 (December 4 for ride along with NJ Mobile Response Unit)
Location: New Brunswick, NJ
Description: Mobile response and stabilization services (MRSS) play an important role in preventing emergency room use, psychiatric hospitalization, residential treatment, and placement disruptions among children, youth, and young adults experiencing a behavioral health crisis. Innovative models include home- and community-based stabilization and case management services, on-site face-to-face therapeutic response; assessment; crisis intervention and stabilization; psychiatric consultation; psychopharmacology; and referrals and linkages to other services and supports. In this cooperative peer convening, participating states will gather in New Brunswick, New Jersey for two days of collaborative work with experts from Wraparound Milwaukee, Connecticut and New Jersey, focused on strategies for developing, implementing and sustaining mobile response and stabilization services for children, youth, and young adults in their states. There will also be an opportunity for 1-2 individuals from each state team to 'ride along' with a mobile response unit for 'hands-on' observation of New Jersey's model the day before the meeting begins.
Family Acceptance Project Behavioral Health Provider Training ▾
Dates: April 25-26, 2017
Location: Detroit, MI
Description: Dr. Caitlin Ryan along with the Family Run Executive Director Leadership Association (FREDLA) will lead this 2-day training on a family-based approach to wellness, prevention, and care for LGBT children, youth, and young adults. This behavioral health training will help providers and FREDLA members learn about the Family Acceptance Project's family intervention and support model to prevent health risks and promote well-being for LGBT young people. Attendees will learn to increase family-oriented services and supports in their agencies and communities while receiving five (5) social work CEUs and Training Units. This meeting is open to the general public, however this meeting will also count towards the SAMHSA Pre-Approved annual grantee training requirement for System of Care grantees.
Meeting Activities
Day 1:
This training day is designed for individuals who are connected to working with youth, youth adults and their families. This would include direct practitioners, supervisors, clinical staff, parent leaders, administrators and others working within Systems of Care. Registration will begin at 8:00 A.M. and the training will begin at 9:00 A.M. until 5:00 P.M.
Learning Objectives:
- Discuss the role of family acceptance and rejection on risk and well-being for LGBT young people
- Describe specific family rejecting behaviors related to increased health risks for LGBT young people, including depression, suicidality, substance abuse, homelessness and HIV; and specific family accepting/supportive behaviors that help protect against risk and promote well-being
- Discuss core principles and strategies from the Family Acceptance Project to help families and caregivers to support their LGBT children, to help decrease risk and increase well-being for LGBT young people
- Identify one to three specific change(s) you will make to implement this new information in your program’s practices and related work with children, youth, young adults and families
There will be a reception for all participants following the training. Information regarding the reception will become available to all attendees soon.
Day 2:
This training day is specifically designed for family run organization leadership, as well as, family leaders, parent peer support partners, family run organization leadership, and lead family contact roles within Systems of Care. Registration will begin at 8:00 A.M. and the training will begin at 9:00 A.M. until 3:00 P.M.
Learning Objectives:
- Increase awareness, knowledge and understanding of ways that family-run organizations can help to support families with LGBT children, youth and young adults and their families
- Discuss ways to integrate the knowledge, understanding and FAP’s family approach to wellness, prevention and care to help families learn to support their LGBT children
- Consider how family-run organizations can develop services and supports that specifically focus on the needs of LGBT children, youth, young adults and their families
- Discuss the support needed by family-run organizations related to outreach, engagement, programming, and implementation for LGBT children, youth, young adults and their families
Facilitators: Sheila Pires, Human Service Collaborative; Suzanne Fields, The Institute for Innovation & Implementation, Shannon Robshaw, The Institute for Innovation & Implementation
Faculty from The National TA Network: Deborah Harburger, Bruce Kamradt, Elizabeth Manley, Melissa Schober, Dayana Simons, Beth Stroul, Millie Sweeney, Selena Webster Bass
Dates: July 11-12, 2017
Location: Rockville, MD
Maximum Number of Participants: Each state teams is limited to a maximum of 8 people
Participants: Applicants are encouraged to think strategically about whom to include on their teams, given their particular population(s) of focus and objectives. Teams should not exceed 8 members. Suggested participants include leadership or key staff from the state Medicaid agency, as well as from Medicaid managed care organizations, child welfare, juvenile justice, mental health, substance use, and/or education, as well as family or youth leaders who have been closely involved in financing discussions related to the system of care and to the development/sustainability of family-and youth-run organizations. Team members should be designated decision-makers for the entities they represent. We encourage the inclusion of Medicaid managed care vendors on the Team but recognize some Teams may select to focus on procurement goals in which inclusion of those Medicaid vendors in all sessions may not be appropriate. If necessary, we can work with states to structure certain discussions to address any procurement-related concerns.
Description: This meeting is a practical, how-to working meeting for strategically selected teams from states. Teams will explore a range of managed care strategies relevant to children, youth and young adults with behavioral health challenges and their families and receive technical assistance from faculty and peers on a specific managed care project or related issue that the Team is bringing to the meeting for consultation. Teams will leave the meeting with their own tailored managed care strategies to address the goals they identified. Interested states or counties must complete the application process to be considered for acceptance as there is limited capacity.
Based on our ongoing work with states, we expect that working sessions will address such topics as: what to include within Medicaid managed care Requests for Proposals (RFPs) and contracts to ensure appropriate customization for children and youth; population-based strategies, including management of sub-populations of children with intensive needs, such as those involved with child welfare or juvenile justice; youth substance use disorder issues; rate setting and risk adjustment; benefit design including evidence-informed benefits; provider network requirements; customized care coordination, levels of care coordination, and health integration approaches including intensive care coordination using Wraparound and health homes; data dashboards and data sharing; quality and measurement; value-based purchasing strategies; health disparities and youth and family engagement in managed care practice and policy.
Tribal System of Care Support Grantee Meeting ▾
Date: April 6, 2017
Location: San Diego, CA
Description: Annual training and peer-to-peer learning opportunity for tribal system of care communities and grantee graduation celebration. This meeting coincides with the NICWA's 35th Annual Protecting Our Children National American Indian Conference on Child Abuse and Neglect taking place on April 2-5 in San Diego, CA.
Graduating grantees this year: Montana Office of Public Instruction, Yellowhawk Tribal Health, Cherokee Nation, and Detroit Wayne County Mental Health Authority.
2016
Mobile Response & Stabilization Services Peer Meeting ▾
Dates:
- April 20-21, 2016 (ride-along with NJ Mobile Response Unit on April 19)
- December 7-8, 2016 (ride-along with NJ Mobile Response Unit on December 6)
Location: New Brunswick, NJ
Faculty:
- National TA Network: Dayana Simons
- Milwaukee, WI: Bruce Kamradt, Steve Dykstra, Chris Morano
- Connecticut: Tim Marshall, Jeff Vanderploeg
- New Jersey: Elizabeth Manley, Ruby Goyal-Carkeek, Wyndee Davis
Description: Mobile response and stabilization services (MRSS) play an important role in preventing emergency room use, psychiatric hospitalization, residential treatment, and placement disruptions among children, youth, and young adults experiencing a behavioral health crisis. Innovative models include home- and community-based stabilization and case management services, on-site face-to-face therapeutic response; assessment; crisis intervention and stabilization; psychiatric consultation; psychopharmacology; and referrals and linkages to other services and supports. In this cooperative peer convening, participating states will gather in New Brunswick, New Jersey for two days of collaborative work with experts from Wraparound Milwaukee, Connecticut and New Jersey, focused on strategies for developing, implementing and sustaining mobile response and stabilization services for children, youth, and young adults in their states. There will also be an opportunity for 1-2 individuals from each state team to 'ride along' with a mobile response unit for 'hands-on' observation of New Jersey's model the day before the meeting begins.
Facilitators: Jane Walker, FREDLA and Johanna Bergen, Youth M.O.V.E. National
Dates: July 20 & 21, 2016
Location: Ohio State Union at Ohio State University, 1739 N. High St. Columbus, OH, 43210
We will offer a complementary shuttle service between the Hilton Columbus Downtown (401 N. High St. Columbus, OH 43215 phone: 614-384-8600) and the Ohio State Union, OSU to all meeting participants no matter where they are lodged.
Description: This meeting has been designed for the leaders of the family and youth movements within behavioral health. Executive directors, program directors or supervisors working in family-run organizations or lead family contacts in states or local communities are encouraged to attend. You do not need to be a System of Care site to participate. However, family leaders must have a youth program embedded in their family-run organization or work closely with an independent youth group or organization. Youth coordinators, youth program managers, executive members of youth boards and other youth leaders are ideal participants to attend. Key agenda areas include: Meaningful Partnership/Alignment of Movements; Models of Partnership with Youth Programs/Organizations; Family Organization Leadership – Leading in Uncertain Times; Incorporating Family and Youth Voice in Evaluation; Staying True to the Movement While Moving Forward…and more! The merging of this professional development meeting for youth and family leaders builds strategic alignment for our work.
Facilitators: Sheila Pires, Human Service Collaborative; Suzanne Fields, The Institute for Innovation & Implementation
Faculty from The National TA Network: Bruce Kamradt, Deborah Harburger, Shannon Robshaw, Dayana Simons, Denise Sulzbach
Dates: August 23-24, 2016
Location: Rockville, MD
Duration: 2 Days
Maximum Number of Participants: Each state teams is limited to a maximum of 8 people
Participants: Applicants are encouraged to think strategically about whom to include on their teams, given their particular population(s) of focus and objectives. Teams should not exceed 8 members. Teams may include leadership or key staff from the state Medicaid agency, as well as from Medicaid managed care organizations, child welfare, juvenile justice, mental health, substance use, and/or education, as well as family or youth leaders who have been closely involved in financing discussions related to the system of care and to the development/sustainability of family-and youth-run organizations. Team members should be designated decision-makers for the entities they represent. We encourage the inclusion of Medicaid managed care vendors on the Team but recognize some Teams may select to focus on procurement goals in which inclusion of those Medicaid vendors in all sessions may not be appropriate. If necessary, we can work with states to structure certain discussions to address any procurement-related concerns.
Description: This meeting is a practical, how-to working meeting for strategically selected teams from states. Teams will explore a range of managed care strategies relevant to children, youth and young adults with behavioral health challenges and their families and receive technical assistance from faculty and peers on a specific managed care project or issue that the Team is bringing to the meeting for consultation. Teams will leave the meeting with their own tailored managed care strategies to address the goals they identified. Interested states or counties must complete the application process to be considered for acceptance as there is limited capacity.
Based on our ongoing work with states, we expect that working sessions will address such topics as: what to include within Medicaid managed care Requests for Proposals (RFPs) and contracts to ensure appropriate customization for children and youth; population-based strategies, including management of sub-populations of children with intensive needs, such as those involved with child welfare or juvenile justice; youth substance use disorder issues; rate setting and risk adjustment; benefit design including evidence-informed benefits; provider network requirements; customized care coordination, levels of care coordination, and health integration approaches including intensive care coordination using Wraparound and health homes; data dashboards and data sharing; quality and measurement; and youth and family engagement in managed care practice and policy.
The National Wraparound Implementation Academy ▾
The National Wraparound Implementation Center is providing a three-day Academy focused on implementation of high quality, research-based Wraparound care coordination on September 19-21, 2016 in Rockville, MD. The Academy will provide individuals with key Wraparound roles - including care coordinators, parent and youth partners, supervisors and managers, policy-makers, family and youth leaders, researchers and evaluators - with opportunities to learn from the field's foremost experts in Wraparound and systems of care.
Presenters:
- Gary Blau (Welcome)
- John VanDenBerg (Keynote)
- Eric Bruns, Toni Donnelly, Kimberly Estep, Marlene Matarese, Sheila Pires, Janet Walker, Michelle Zabel and more!
At the Academy you will:
- Be trained on new skills, or deepen and enhance existing ones.
- Gain insight into designing and sustaining policy and funding environments that are hospitable to Wraparound and systems of care principles and practice.
- Learn how to supervise and manage within a Wrapround-informed system of care.
- Strengthen connections across family, community and natural sources of support.
- Mobilize the evidence base on "what works" at system, program and practice levels.
- Learn how to use data to support effective decision-making, be accountable to funders, and stay on track.
- Get individualized technical assistance from over a dozen internationally-recognized content experts in Wraparound, evidence-based practice, research/evaluation, and family- and youth-driven care.
- Network with existing colleagues and make new friends.
- Earn CEUs for attending.
Innovations in Children's Behavioral Health Tiered Care Coordination Expert Convening ▾
Facilitators: Sheila Pires, Human Service Collaborative; Suzanne Fields, The Institute for Innovation & Implementation
Location: Hilton Downtown, Tampa, FL
Dates: March 16 & 17, 2016
Description: The Technical Assistance Network for Children's Behavioral Health is convening an expert consultation meeting on the topic of Innovations in Children's Behavioral Health: Tiered Care Coordination. In an effort to improve health outcomes and manage costs, states are looking for ways to ensure that children receive care coordination services that are appropriate to the level of intensity to meet their needs. As Medicaid behavioral health care increasingly is organized within a capitated managed care arrangement, States also are trying to determine the tiers of care coordination appropriate to the managed care organization (MCO), providers of individual services, medical homes and health homes, and specialty intensive care coordination approaches (such as intensive care coordination using Wraparound).
There has not been an organized effort to examine these various approaches collectively and develop consensus on effective approaches to ensure that children with behavioral health challenges receive the right amount and intensity of care coordination within the most effective arrangements. The expert panel will examine quantitative data, gray literature, and emerging practice strategies to begin to develop guidance for the field.The meeting will include approximately twenty subject matter experts representing national and state Medicaid, managed care, children's behavioral health, and evidence-based practice developers.
2015
The Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) 2015 Summer Training Event ▾
Location: Wyndham Hotel and American Training Inc.* (our host) in Andover, MA (approximately 30 minutes from Boston Logan International Airport and 28 minutes from Manchester-Boston Regional Airport)
Date: August 5-7, 2015
Duration: 3 days
Purpose of Training Event: The purpose of this event is to support the use of best practices in residential and community services that result in sustained positive outcomes post-discharge for youth and families receiving residential interventions.
Participants will include leaders and clinical staff of residential and community programs, policy makers, funders, advocates, families and youth.
Desired Overall Outcome of the Training Event: Attendees will leave the training event with practical strategies to improve policies and practices in their programs (residential and/or community) or agencies (oversight/funding).
*Logistical support for this meeting provided by the American Institutes for Research.
Facilitators: Johanna Bergan, Youth M.O.V.E National and Lynda Gargan, National Federation of Families
Location: Durham, NC
Dates: July 30-31, 2015
Duration: 2 days
Maximum Number of Participants: 80 (20 grantees/states)
40 per Family/Parent Peer track and 40 per Youth/Young Adult Peer track
Participants: Grantee teams should include leaders from the System of Care grant community, state Medicaid and/or behavioral health office, and organizations that are current or potential employers of family/parent or youth peer support. Team members must be designated decision-makers for the entity they represent. Each team must designate in their application their desire to participate in either the family/parent or youth/young adult track.
Description: This two-day event has been designed to maximize the power of peer learning. Participants will gather for an initial plenary session that will provide an overview of family/parent and youth/young adult peer support nationwide. Following this session, teams will move into intensive sessions based upon their population of focus (either family/parent or youth/young adult). Each team must designate in their application their desire to participate in either the family/parent or youth track. It is possible to send two teams that would attend each track separately.
Peer support is available to some degree through Medicaid in 32 states, although often in a limited fashion. Many states are exploring ways to expand peer support to include parents and/or youth and young adults. This working meeting will explore questions such as: Where is your state in this process? Has your state created new models for family/parent or youth/young adult peer support, or are they trying to serve families and youth through an already existing adult model? Has your state developed a curriculum and certification process for family/parent or youth/young adult peer support that highlights the unique characteristics of this emerging workforce?
This working meeting will be an intensive, interactive event that will bring national experts and communities/states together for in-depth dialogue and to create action plans based upon the developmental stage of the grantee community. Teams will be gathering from states that are in the initial, planning, and implementation phases of peer support development. Through the combination of national expertise and peer learning, all participants will develop a keen understanding of national trends and their implications for local implementation and sustainability.
Facilitators: Kamala Allen, Center for Health Care Strategies; Sheila Pires, Human Service Collaborative; and Christopher Bellonci, M.D., Tufts University
Location: Johns Hopkins Gaithersburg Campus
Date: September 11, 2015
Duration: 1 day
Maximum Number of Participants: 30 (5-6 grantees/states)
Participants: Teams include SOC grant leaders, Medicaid and behavioral health agency representatives, and child welfare agency representatives. Participants should demonstrate capacity and commitment to implementing improved cross-agency oversight and monitoring processes for the use of psychotropic medications.
Description: This small group meeting will provide participants with an opportunity to engage in specialized discussion on the design and implementation of effective oversight and monitoring programs for the prescription and use of psychotropic medication with children, youth, and young adults.
This meeting will be connected to a broader learning community focused on psychotropic medication monitoring in children’s behavioral health.
Logistical support for this meeting was provided by the American Institutes for Research.
Leveraging Managed Care Approaches to Promote Children's Behavioral Health ▾
Facilitators: Sheila Pires, Human Service Collaborative; Suzanne Fields, The Institute for Innovation & Implementation
Location: Baltimore, Maryland
Date: July 20-21, 2015
Duration: 2 Days
Participants: Applicants are encouraged to think strategically about whom to include on their teams, given their particular population(s) of focus and objectives. Teams should not exceed 8 members. Teams may include leadership or key staff from the state Medicaid agency, as well as from Medicaid managed care organizations, child welfare, juvenile justice, mental health, substance use, and/or education, as well as family or youth leaders who have been closely involved in financing discussions related to the system of care and to the development/sustainability of family-and youth-run organizations. Team members should be designated decision-makers for the entities they represent. We encourage the inclusion of Medicaid managed care vendors on the Team but recognize some Teams may select to focus on procurement goals in which inclusion of those Medicaid vendors in all sessions may not be appropriate. If necessary, we can work with states to structure certain discussions to address any procurement-related concerns.
Description: This two-day meeting will address managed care strategies to promote children’s behavioral health. Through a highly interactive process, participating states will work with experts and peers to produce action plans based on research and practice knowledge to promote children’s behavioral health through managed care strategies.
Teams will explore a range of managed care strategies and how to customize those strategies to address the needs of children with behavioral health challenges and children in child welfare.
Sessions will address in-depth such topics as what to include within Medicaid managed care RFPs and contracts to ensure appropriate customization for children; rate setting and risk adjustment; benefit design, including evidence-informed benefits; provider network requirements; customized care coordination and health integration approaches, including intensive care coordination using Wraparound; data dashboards and data sharing; quality and measurement; and youth and family engagement in practice.
Facilitator: Kathy Lazear, University of South Florida
Location: Wraparound Milwaukee site, Milwaukee, WI
Date: May 19-20, 2015
Duration: 1.5 days
Maximum Number of Participants: 50 participants (7-10 grantees/states)
Participants: Participants will include small teams that include state agency leaders who make policy and resource decisions, providers who can change practice, CLC coordinators, and leaders of family and youth organizations who are committed to promoting positive change.
Description: The purpose of this meeting is to identify effective and best practices as states and communities meet the challenges serving an increasingly diverse population. Participants attending this working meeting will learn how Wraparound Milwaukee has built, expanded, and maintained their diverse provider network for nearly 20 years. Through a series of presentations and interactive panels, participants will hear “lessons learned” from the Wraparound Milwaukee team and key provider agencies and get practical, hands-on advice on how to build, maintain, and evaluate the performance of a Provider Network, and deliver effective culturally responsive services.
Participants will have an opportunity to engage in discussions about how to operationalize best practices, including integrating these practices into plans, strategies for expansion and sustainability (including contracting practices), building workforce capacity, implementing quality improvement strategies, and meeting CLAS Standards. Additionally, participants will hear from a panel of providers who are serving ethnic minority youth and youth who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT), effectively focusing on practices that are evidence-based, culturally responsive, community-defined, and/or culturally adapted.
Wraparound Milwaukee is a nationally recognized System of Care serving over 1,600 youth with serious emotional and behavioral health needs and their families annually. A cornerstone for the success of Wraparound Milwaukee has been the development of an array of over 70 services provided by an organized network of over 160 community agencies providing behavioral health and supportive services to families. Operating on a managed-care, fee-for-service platform, Wraparound Milwaukee has been able to highly individualize the provision of care through its expanded service array while also attracting culturally and ethnically diverse providers from the Milwaukee community to deliver those services.
How to Finance the Expansion and Sustainability of Systems of Care ▾
Facilitators: Sheila Pires, Human Service Collaborative; Suzanne Fields, The Institute for Innovation & Implementation; Doreen Cavanaugh, Georgetown University; and Beth Stroul, Management and Training Innovations
Location: Johns Hopkins Gaithersburg Campus
Date: September 9-10, 2015
Duration: 2 days
Maximum Number of Participants: 55 (8-9 grantees/states)
Participants: Teams should include representatives from Medicaid (Medicaid behavioral health director and/or Medicaid managed care director); Child Welfare (director, fiscal director, IV-E waiver coordinator, other); Behavioral Health (child behavioral health director, fiscal director, SOC grant Principal Investigator and/or Project Director); Juvenile Justice (director, fiscal director); and statewide family organization (director or administrator).
Description: This meeting will be structured as a practical, how-to meeting for strategically selected teams from state and local grantees. Teams will explore a range of financing issues and strategies to integrate systems of care within larger delivery systems as a primary sustainability strategy. The goal for grantees is to develop their own tailored financing approaches to expand and sustain the principles and central operating components of systems of care statewide. Sessions will address such topics as:
- How to analyze expenditures and utilization across systems to identify:
- disproportionalities and disparities based on region, race/ethnicity, gender, and aid category in Medicaid (TANF, foster care, SSI/disabled),
- “poor outcome-high cost” spending,
- opportunities for redirection and for maximizing federal match in Medicaid and Title IV-E,
- gaps and strengths in financing for evidence-informed home- and community-based services, and
- opportunities to create more coordinated financing approaches;
- How to make effective and efficient use of Medicaid and health reform opportunities, covering such areas as:
- benefit design, waivers and options important for children with behavioral health challenges,
- enrollment strategies, and
- quality efforts;
- What to include within Medicaid managed care RFPs and contracts to ensure appropriate customization for children with behavioral health challenges and children in child welfare such as:
- evidence-informed service array,
- provider network requirements,
- quality processes informed by families and youth,
- appropriate care coordination, including intensive care coordination using Wraparound,
- use of family and youth peer support, and
- process and outcome measures;
- Cross-agency financing of effective home- and community-based services, including integrating system of care and child welfare IV-E waiver initiatives, school-linked supports, use of TANF monies, and opportunities within juvenile justice systems, interagency compacts, and social impact bonds;
- Cross-agency financing of intensive care coordination using Wraparound, including integration within Medicaid, development of bundled and population case rates, and opportunities for redirection of existing dollars to improve cost and quality of care;
- Financing family-run and youth-run organizational capacity to support an array of activities; and
- Using financing and utilization data to establish the return on investment from systems of care.
Logistical support for this meeting was provided by the American Institutes for Research.