Category: News

  • Sites Professionals Joins CA Alliance

    Sites Professionals Joins CA Alliance


    Sites Professionals is pleased to announce that we have joined the California Alliance of Child and Family Services as an Associate Member. The Alliance offers a range of services that benefit at-risk Californians through public policy advocacy, providing resources to community mental health, and coordinating a network of mutual cooperation and support among mental health service providers in California.

  • Happy New Year!

    Happy New Year!

    Happy New Year from Sites Professionals! We are so very grateful for you, and for the community of mental health service providers of which we are a part. It means so much to us to be able to serve our community and we wish to thank our clients, partners, psychiatrists and support staff with whom we interact every day.

    Warmly,

    Nancy & Jeff

  • Review of CARF Recertification Requirements

    Review of CARF Recertification Requirements


    Our client recently added medication support services to their mental health service offerings and partnered with Sites Professionals to place a psychiatrist in their program. The addition of psychiatry services necessitated a review of their internal policies in preparation for CARF recertification. CARF accreditation is a service for health and human services providers that reviews and certifies their standards of care against peer-reviewed benchmarks. Sites Professionals assisted our client in developing their medication use policies and standards to meet their CARF recertification process, as well as reviewing their existing medication support practices. The result was that our client was ahead of schedule in preparing for CARF recertification, and was confident in a positive outcome. Sites Professionals is eager to share our experience in medication support to benefit our clients and the patients they serve.

  • Psychiatrists Available

    Psychiatrists Available

    The current hiring crunch is real, and we understand it has had a disproportionate impact on community mental health service providers, making it difficult to deliver timely services to those in greatest need. We also know that securing psychiatrists has been a long-standing challenge.

    At Sites Professionals, our mission from the beginning has been to recruit and place psychiatrists in community mental health to increase access to psychiatric care for underserved populations. We have child and adolescent psychiatrists available and ready to work in your agency. They are licensed in California and have community mental health experience. Sites Professionals provides credentialing, tech support, and much more at no cost to you. Connect with us today

  • Supporting Timely Access to Psychiatric Care

    Supporting Timely Access to Psychiatric Care

    Sites Professionals has been building relationships with psychiatrists for years. We specialize in placing them in positions in community mental health, where they have improved access to psychiatric care, particularly for those in underserved communities. Sites Professionals can support your agency with credentialed and matched psychiatrists to help reduce client wait times and keep you in compliance.

    Call us today, we have Child, Adolescent and Adult Psychiatrists ready to join your team.

  • E-Prescribing Required in California

    E-Prescribing Required in California

    Effective as of January 1, 2022, health care practitioners submitting prescriptions to pharmacies must do so electronically. Passed into law in 2018, assembly bill #2789 also has provisions for pharmacies handling prescriptions, with penalties for noncompliance including referral to state licensing boards for sanction. The E-Prescribing rules apply for controlled and non-controlled substances. There are a number of exemptions. We would encourage you to read the bill and seek assistance if you have specific questions:

    https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=20…

    The good news is that many Electronic Health Records systems have built-in or compatible E-prescribing components. Additionally, the benefits of E-prescribing include faster transmission, easier access for patients, and reduced opportunity for misuse.

  • Planning for the future of mental health

    Planning for the future of mental health

    There has never been a better time to revisit your plan for providing mental health services into the future. Three major forces – advances in technology, a shortage of available labor, and the ongoing pandemic – will be responsible for permanent changes to our industry. Flexibility, adaptability and a future-focused vision are essential to your organizations’s ability to provide the best mental health services for years to come.

    Sites Professionals does more than just provide adaptable psychiatric staffing solutions. We can also help your organization with nearly twenty years of experience in community mental health, with expertise in the areas of medication support process development and technology. Talk to us to find out more about how we have helped other local organizations, and see what we can do for you.

  • What is PAVE, Sign Up Now

    What is PAVE, Sign Up Now

    Beginning July 1, 2021*, providers who service the Medi-Cal population will be required to use the PAVE system when submitting new applications or when making certain changes to an existing application (eg. adding a location). For various reasons, even when not creating or changing a Medi-Cal Provider application, all of the provider types listed below should enroll in the PAVE portal before this date.

    Background and Acronyms

    PAVE stands for Provider Application and Validation for Enrollment system. PAVE is administered by the Provider Enrollment Division (PED) of the Department of Health Care Services (DHCS). Providers billing Medi-Cal for services must have an approved application with PED. PAVE replaces the paper application process with an online portal designed to improve the speed and efficiency of the application process for providers while providing DHCS with new tools to evaluate and periodically reassess the providers servicing the Medi-Cal population.

    Ultimately, the move to PAVE is designed to improve the quality of, and access to, care for patients with Medi-Cal, while ostensibly making the application process easier for providers.

    Psychiatrists and Prescribers will enroll using the Ordering/Referring/Prescribing Only Provider category.

    Sign up Now

    Information about the PAVE system including deadlines and eligibility is plentiful but often contradictory. We reviewed several sources (linked below) and spoke with a customer representative to compile this information.

    From our perspective there are at least three benefits to using PAVE for providers.

    FIRST, the application is potentially faster. By entering an NPI number with a Medi-Cal PIN (or other identification) the system will automatically sync existing Medi-Cal provider information with your PAVE Business Profile. More about Profiles and Users in benefit #3.

    SECOND, status notifications including approval and requests for corrections or additional information should be available much quicker and accessible directly from the PAVE system.

    THIRD, the PAVE system allows providers to delegate management of the provider’s Business Profile to additional Users in the PAVE system. PAVE User accounts are how an individual logs into PAVE. A PAVE Business Profile is the provider entity with approval to bill Medi-Cal. You log in with your User account in order to make changes to a Business Profile, and if you are a busy provider you can delegate this to another individual with PAVE access. This could significantly reduce the administrative burden on some providers.

    But Wait, There’s More!

    After enrolling in PAVE your next task is to register in the Medi-Cal Rx Provider Web Portal, more on that another time. Below you will find two lists: types of providers required to use PAVE and links to additional information including the Medi-Cal Rx Provider Web Portal.

    REQUIRED MEDI-CAL PROVIDERS

    • Licensed clinical social workers
    • Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists
    • Licensed Professional Clinical Counselors
    • Licensed Psychologists
    • Nurse Practitioners
    • Occupational Therapists
    • Medical Doctors and Osteopaths (DO)
    • Physician Assistants
    • Registered pharmacists, pharmacists
    • Speech Therapists

    “Any discipline not listed above does not need to enroll in PAVE. This includes but is not limited to Psychiatric Technicians, Clinical Nurse Specialists, and Registered Nurses. Students and trainees do not need to enroll in the PAVE System.” (From Quality Assurance Bulletin, link #5 below)

    A list of supported provider types can be found here:
    https://www.dhcs.ca.gov/provgovpart/Documents/PAVE_Project_for_Provider_…

    LINKS AND REFERENCES

    1. PAVE Login: https://www.dhcs.ca.gov/provgovpart/Pages/PAVE.aspx
    2. PAVE FAQs: https://www.dhcs.ca.gov/provgovpart/Documents/PAVE_Project_for_Provider_…
    3. SMHS FAQs: https://www.dhcs.ca.gov/provgovpart/Documents/PAVE_Project_for_Provider_…
    4. PAVE Training Videos: https://www.dhcs.ca.gov/provgovpart/Pages/PAVEProviderTrainingVideos.aspx
    5. LA County QA Bulletin: http://file.lacounty.gov/SDSInter/dmh/1081140_20-07PAVEMediCalRxPortal.pdf
    6. LA DMH PAVE FAQs: http://file.lacounty.gov/SDSInter/dmh/1081141_PAVEFAQs.pdf
    7. Medi-Cal Rx: https://medi-calrx.dhcs.ca.gov/home/

    *this is the most up-to-date information we can find.

  • SCPS 2020 Career Day

    SCPS 2020 Career Day


    Well, it certainly looked and sounded a lot different this year. The Southern California Psychiatric Society (Virtual) Career Day was on Saturday. The event was a reminder of how much the future depends on our willingness to continue to show up and serve our communities, especially during the most challenging of circumstances. For those in need, the need has only become more acute. For those who can be engaged in service, the involvement can provide some relief and fulfillment. It was great to be a part of a panel with so many people putting themselves out there to make a difference in the lives of others.

    Here’s to all the mental health workers out there! Wishing you a safe and productive holiday season.

    We have a separate page with pictures from past SCPS events and even some swag:
    https://sitesprofessionals.com/career-day

  • New Opportunities

    New Opportunities

    Thanks to the rapid adoption of telepsychiatry, as required in response to the pandemic, this year has seen an increase in opportunities for psychiatrists, patients, and mental health service agencies. The use of telepsychiatry has freed psychiatric services from the constraints of geography. The distance between patients and the best-matched psychiatrist is no longer a barrier to providing excellent services. With a valid medical license to practice in California, a psychiatrist has many new opportunities to practice in the places with greatest need. Having these choices means that finding a better match becomes more likely. A better match benefits patients and mental health service agencies alike. Telepsychiatry provides agencies the flexibility to match psychiatrists by their skills and experience, as opposed to matching them by how close they live to the site of care.

    At Sites Professionals we have long advocated for the adoption of telehealth to increase access to care for the most vulnerable populations in our communities. As part of our continued commitment to this mission, we have new opportunities available to match psychiatrists with community mental health agencies in California.

  • Adaptable Psychiatric Services

    Adaptable Psychiatric Services


    Mental Health Agencies: We have psychiatrists available for part-time moonlighting in community mental health. Adaptable and team oriented, our psychiatrists are vetted, credentialed and insured.

  • Lessons of 10 Years Spent Working From Home

    Lessons of 10 Years Spent Working From Home

    My phone rings at 12:35 PM, every day Monday through Friday. It has since about 2010, when I began building my first business. I was based in Los Angeles, I had three partners in North Carolina, and we supervised development teams in Ukraine, Utah and Venezuela. I worked from home in a 1960’s-era two bedroom apartment I shared with my wife.

    At first I was allowed the guest room as an office but then something incredible happened. In the midst of all the stress and uncertainty of having quit my job to found a startup – not paying myself, fretting constantly about my ability to provide for the two of us – we had twins.

    I lost my office and about 4 months worth of sleep. Already in an agitated state, I started to forget lunch. Using the phone alarm as a reminder to eat started as a New Years’ resolution to take better care of my health. It was simple enough (and programable) for me to keep at it.

    In 10 years of working from home I’ve picked up some habits that I hope you could find useful or at least entertaining.

    One thing about managing remote teams is that the in-person tools we use to motivate and hold people accountable do not always translate to the virtual work environment. What does work? The answer is highly dependent on the members of your team. I wouldn’t presume to be able to tell you what to try with your team in an anonymous internet post like this one. In a call, perhaps. Until then, here are some thoughts:

    TRUST: Trust your team. Set clear expectations and firm deadlines but relax on the supervision. We are all facing unique work-from-home circumstances and unless you are in TV or radio, it probably doesn’t matter when the work is done as long as it is completed on time. Many are now home-schooling their children. Challenges with shopping means that maintaining the household is spilling over into weekdays. All of us have earned a nap now and then. By now, all our work-days are likely to be fragmented. Define the goals you have for your team in simple terms, set deadlines and make yourself available for questions.

    PATIENCE: Cool it with the video conferences. Two per day is plenty, even two could be too much if they drag on. If you have mental health practitioners providing services via telehealth for the first time, be mindful of the added challenges this presents. Working over video is still a fairly isolating experience and it requires adaptation. Even without technical glitches the pace of discussion has to slow to account for network latency. It is easy to step on each others sentences mid-thought when the video lags. We can also lose a lot of information normally communicated non-verbally. You may be surprised how much information we share by our posture, eye contact, pace of breath, etc. It takes time to get acclimated to reading non-verbal cues in this digital format, but it gets easier. We have had the pleasure of working with many practitioners who have thrived using telehealth. It is a wonderful tool and a skill that can be mastered. Do what ever you can to reduce technical problems, including providing new equipment if possible. Be patient, and understand that all of our jobs have become more complicated.

    EMPATHY AS THE DEFAULT RESPONSE TO CONFLICT: Lastly, obviously, none of us have experienced anything like this before. Remember that we all react to change differently, and we adapt to it at different paces. Our adaptation will not always be linear, we will regress from time to time. If you find yourself in conflict with someone on your team, I would encourage you to first try to reframe the problem using empathy. Our goal should be to help one another. Together we will succeed.

    Thank you for reading. I would love to hear your thoughts. Peace, and don’t forget to eat lunch.

    -Jeff
    Jeff@sitesprofessionals.com