Fiscal impact reports (FIRs) are prepared by the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) for standing finance
committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
if they are used for other purposes.
Current FIRs (in HTML & Adobe PDF formats) are a vailable on the NM Legislative Website (legis.state.nm.us).
Adobe PDF versions include all attachments, whereas HTML versions may not. Previously issued FIRs and
attachments may be obtained from the LFC in Suite 101 of the State Capitol Building North.
F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Leavell
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/22/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Carlsbad Telepsychiatry Services
SB 85
ANALYST Haug
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$157.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Higher Education Department (HED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 85 appropriates $157.0 from the general fund to the Board of Regents of the
University of New Mexico for telepsychiatry services in Carlsbad. No more than ten percent of
the appropriation may be used by the university for administrative costs.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of
$157.0
contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general fund. Any
unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2009 shall revert to the
general fund.
The HED states that this request was submitted by UNM to the New Mexico Higher Education
Department for review, but was not recommended by the Executive.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to the HED, UNM’s Center for Rural & Community Behavioral Health’s (CRCBH)
Telepsychiatry and Behavioral Health Program has a partnership with Carlsbad Behavioral
Health Services and is designed to:
pg_0002
Senate Bill 85 – Page
2
.
Promote behavioral health workforce development opportunities for providers of medical
and behavioral healthcare in rural/frontier New Mexico;
.
Provide opportunity for children, adolescents, adults and families in rural/frontier New
Mexico access to psychiatric specialists with particular expertise in child/adolescent,
substance-use-disorders, neuropsychiatric, and geriatric populations via telehealth
technology;
.
Foster collaboration between primary care and behavioral health providers in these
settings;
.
Be both flexible enough to adequately respond to the special contexts in which providers
care for New Mexicans in rural/frontier areas and structured enough to be functional and
implemented.
The HED states further that this approach provides various options for distance education (from
didactic instruction to case consultation to collaborative assessment and/or treatment) for
providers of medical and behavioral healthcare in rural/frontier areas while also directly
improving access to psychiatric services. The approach includes the provision of educational
credits for participating providers and ensures that community providers will be able to bill for
time spent co-treating clients through telehealth when appropriate. Emphasis is placed on the
dissemination, modeling and use of evidence-based practice through training, consultation and a
model of patient-and-family-centered interdisciplinary collaborative care. The goals of the
program are:
.
Increased access to specialty psychiatric services throughout New Mexico via telehealth.
.
Increased clinician skill and satisfaction with skills specific to people with behavioral
health problems.
.
Establish/reinforce communication and collaboration between clinicians in school-based
health centers & local primary care providers.
The HED states that in addition to the partnership with Carlsbad Behavioral Health Services, the
Telepsychiatry and Behavioral Health Program has partnerships with:
•
Region IX Educational Cooperative/Ruidoso School Based Health Center
•
Hidalgo Medical Services/Silver City High School's school based health center
•
Sangre De Cristo Community Health Partnership
•
Indian Health Services
•
Gallup Indian Medical Center
•
Apex Education
•
New Mexico Human Services Department
•
New Mexico Department of Health
•
New Mexico Department of Health/Office of School and Adolescent Health
•
UNM Center for Telehealth; UNM Project ECHO; UNM REACH Program
GH/mt