Langhinrichsen-Rohling Jennifer, Osofsky Howard, Osofsky Joy, Rohrer Glenn, Rehner Timothy
Gulf Coast Behavioral Health and Resiliency Center, University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama (Dr Langhinrichsen-Rohling); Departments of Psychiatry (Drs H. Osofsky and J. Osofsky) and Pediatrics (Dr J. Osofsky), Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, Louisiana; MBHCP-Florida, University of West Florida, Pensacola, Florida (Dr Rohrer); and School of Social Work University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, Mississippi (Dr Rehner).
J Public Health Manag Pract. 2017 Nov/Dec;23 Suppl 6 Suppl, Gulf Region Health Outreach Program:S11-S18. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000000661.
The 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill triggered numerous concerns regarding the health and well-being of citizens within the already vulnerable Gulf Coast region. Four Mental and Behavioral Health Capacity Projects (MBHCPs) united to form the Quad-State MBHCP component of the Gulf Region Health Outreach Program (GRHOP). Their shared mission was to increase mental and behavioral health (MBH) capacity within coastal counties of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and the Florida Panhandle.
To describe strategies used to collectively enhance the impact of the 4 state-specific MBHCPs and to share lessons learned from a multistate collaborative flexibly designed to meet a shared mission.
Archival materials were assessed. They included attendance sheets/notes from regularly scheduled group meetings, GRHOP quarterly and annual reports, and state-specific MBHCP logic models. Nationally available data on MBH services provided in project-relevant primary care sites were also examined.
Three strategies were found to be effective facilitators of collective success: (i) reciprocal participation in the backbone organization (GRHOP); (ii) creation and comparison of state-specific MBHCP logic models and activities; and (iii) cross-fertilization among the MBHCP state-specific logic models, a unified Quad-State, and the GRHOP-wide logic model to generate additional synergistic endeavors and measureable outcomes. Examples of region-wide MBHCP success, such as uptake in integrated health services in health care clinics across the jurisdiction of investment, are presented.
Isolated approaches to complex issues are, at times, ineffective. The Collective Impact (CI) model, with an emphasis on coordination among existing organizations, stakeholders, and the public, can serve as a guidepost to facilitate sustainable change even when used in a modified form. Strategies discussed herein for maximizing the 5 prescribed CI conditions provide an important roadmap for how to interface among multidisciplinary projects seeking to address the same, large-scale public health problem.