Mental health is a top community health need nationwide. In this conversation, John Muir Health's Jesse Tamplen, vice president of care coordination, and Jamie Elmasu, director of community health improvement, explain how community health assessments (CHAs), data-driven planning and nonprofit partnerships, are expanding access to patients who need it most. Learn how this health system's community blueprint is leading to better ecosystems of care in Northern California.
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00:00:01:02 - 00:00:27:10
Tom Haederle
Welcome to Advancing Health. Providing effective and efficiently targeted behavioral health services to a widely diverse community is no easy task. Today, we hear how a California based health system relies on accurate data collection and community partnerships to pinpoint where services are needed and how it's making a measurable difference.
00:00:27:12 - 00:00:48:03
Jordan Steiger
My name is Jordan Steiger, and I am the AHA director of Behavioral Health and Violence Prevention. I'm really excited to be joined today by Jesse Tamplen, who is the executive administrator of Behavioral Health and the vice president of continuous performance improvement and patient care coordination at John Muir Health, and Jamie Amosu, who is the director of Community Health Improvement.
00:00:48:05 - 00:01:02:06
Jordan Steiger
They've done a lot of work from community based programs to programs within their hospital system. And so we're really excited to see how they are leading the way, and hopefully others can learn from the work that they've been doing. So Jesse and Jamie, thank you so much for being here with us today.
00:01:02:09 - 00:01:03:00
Jesse Tamplen
Pleasure, Jordan.
00:01:03:07 - 00:01:04:18
Jamie Elmasu
Thank you for having us.
00:01:04:20 - 00:01:16:15
Jordan Steiger
To get us started, I would love for you to just tell the audience a little bit about your roles at John Muir Health, what you do and what your community is like and what your patients are like that you serve. Jesse, let's start with you.
00:01:16:17 - 00:01:38:29
Jesse Tamplen
Perfect. Jesse Champlin, the vice president of patient care coordination, continuous performance improvement. And for this conversation, the executive administrator of behavioral health. I oversee all behavioral health across John Muir. And for those of you who don't know, John Muir is an independent health care system about 30 miles east of San Francisco. We're a three hospital system.
00:01:38:29 - 00:02:13:28
Jesse Tamplen
That's two acute care medical centers. And then a psychiatric hospital. And then we have a large outpatient footprint with ambulatory care, including behavioral health. I work with the teams, not only the behavioral health teams, but all of the health care teams to really integrate behavioral health so that we can provide a whole person care model to really support our community and our patients where they're at, and to make sure that they have access to lifesaving behavioral health care in our acute psychiatric hospital that serves children, adolescents, adults and older adults.
00:02:14:01 - 00:02:35:23
Jesse Tamplen
One of our distinct factors about John Muir behavioral health is for our psychiatric hospital. We have some of the most under 12 and under 18 beds in California. So not only are we a local destination of care, but really a center of excellence across the whole state, and many times outside of the state.
00:02:35:25 - 00:02:50:19
Jordan Steiger
Amazing. You said so many things I want to get back to in this conversation. And I also want to just highlight that Jesse is a member of AHA's Committee on Behavioral Health. And he knows his stuff in behavioral health so that he's a great person to learn from today. Jamie, tell us a little bit about you.
00:02:50:21 - 00:03:22:15
Jamie Elmasu
Yes. Thanks, Jordan. So my name is Jamie Amosu, and I'm the director of community health improvement at John Muir Health. And, you know my role really is focused externally, mostly and primarily, on the geographies that we serve, which cover and span all of Contra Costa County, northern Alameda County as well as the Tri-Valley area. And so, just to give a little glimpse into the geography of John Muir, health, and what's really important to note is that our the communities that we serve are vastly diverse in terms of income, status, race, ethnicity and the likes.
00:03:22:15 - 00:03:32:15
Jamie Elmasu
And so when we're talking about different approaches to behavioral health and mental health strategies, it really does, depend on the types of populations that we're intending to serve.
00:03:32:18 - 00:03:43:04
Jordan Steiger
That's great. And I think you're setting the stage really well for this first question here. So I know that your community health assessment identified behavioral health as a top priority for your community. Is that right?
00:03:43:06 - 00:04:14:12
Jamie Elmasu
That's correct. Well, it's really unique is that I've actually been working at John Muir Health for 12 years. And we conduct a community health needs assessment cycle every three years. And in my entire time that I've been here, behavioral health has been the at least at the top three identified community priority needs. And so I think that's really important to really call out because behavioral health - although we are innovative in our strategies and our approaches to address behavioral health needs in the community - the need still exists, right?
00:04:14:12 - 00:04:32:04
Jordan Steiger
We know behavioral health doesn't discriminate, and it is present in every community, and it shows up for different people in different ways. But knowing this and knowing that this has been something that has kind of shown up over and over. How did you start like bringing those services to the community? What was your first step?
00:04:32:06 - 00:04:51:00
Jamie Elmasu
Yeah, I mean, so the CHNA is a really intentional approach, right? So not only is it intentional, it's also very widespread in terms of how we gather data, how we report on the data and how decisions are being made. So it's actually a process where we collaborate with the other non-for-profit health systems in our area.
00:04:51:02 - 00:05:21:09
Jamie Elmasu
We conduct focus groups with community members. We conduct key informant interviews with stakeholders across our service area. And we look at data, right? So when we look at data, when it comes to county resources, school district resources, and many, many others and all of that is compiled into a really robust assessment where we actually identify those community needs, priority areas, and then we can look in and see specifically geographically or population wise, which communities are in need of services.
00:05:21:11 - 00:05:42:04
Jamie Elmasu
And then when it comes back to actually creating our implementation strategy, what we do is we actually create different approaches based on the communities that we're speaking about, right? And it's not that John Muir Health is here designing approaches that we are now telling the community to implement. It's actually in partnership with nonprofit organizations. And I think that's really key.
00:05:42:07 - 00:06:04:29
Jamie Elmasu
And so we've created, you know, really various opportunities, right? So whether it is let's say, for example, a community based, nontraditional approach, right. Like a premature community health worker approach. We have several partnerships, actually, where we help fund and provide grants for those organizations to actually disseminate, you know, these very nontraditional approaches to mental health interventions.
00:06:05:02 - 00:06:34:17
Jamie Elmasu
And that really targets, you know, certain communities that maybe don't have access to traditional health care, utilizes more of a group approach, a lay health worker approach model that's actually very effective. So we've had research studies actually done on some of our community health worker programs in partnership with Monument Impact, a local nonprofit organization. And it actually has statistically significant results in terms of reduction of anxiety, of stress and of depression in the communities that we're serving
00:06:34:17 - 00:06:42:16
Jamie Elmasu
and that program specifically, we actually celebrated, it's ten years, so a full decade in partnership with that program.
00:06:42:18 - 00:07:03:26
Jordan Steiger
I mean, congratulations on ten years. I think ten years in any program is incredible. And especially something that is so focused on community and you know, driven by those community partners, I think is really something to be proud of. Jesse, I'm sure that you have played a big role alongside Jamie, in helping kind of shape this behavioral health, you know, approach in the community.
00:07:03:27 - 00:07:06:10
Jordan Steiger
So tell us a little bit about what you've done.
00:07:06:12 - 00:07:28:06
Jesse Tamplen
I worked very closely with Jamie. One of the elements about a community health needs assessment, especially when you're a nonprofit, it's how are we elevating the health of the community in the local environment that we're in. And so as a hospital and a treatment providers, we also have that number one responsibility of making sure that we're providing that life saving care and that quality of care
00:07:28:11 - 00:07:50:07
Jesse Tamplen
when people come into our outpatient as well as our inpatient. So it's a very nice synergistic combination where Jamie and I get together with the community stakeholders, look at our needs assessment. We have a board that oversees that community health needs assessment. And then we really look at where do we have the biggest health disparities in the community?
00:07:50:13 - 00:08:13:17
Jesse Tamplen
Where do we find that we can support that community that does not have needed services if it be in schools or unhoused? If it's for communities that are further away from a metropolitan area so that we're really looking at creating an ecosystem. I think one of the unique things when we talk about behavioral health is it is the most stigmatized diagnosis that we have.
00:08:13:19 - 00:08:36:12
Jesse Tamplen
And as students when you talk about behavioral health, people will go into some social aspects of behavioral health. But Jordan, as you said, behavioral health is regardless of socioeconomic status, the nice area that when we work with Jamie and the community health needs assessment, not only are we providing those essential services out in the community, but we're helping to stigma-bust the stigma around behavioral health.
00:08:36:19 - 00:09:09:03
Jesse Tamplen
So when we create this ecosystem, focus on the whole person care, it's not only the individual outcomes that we're looking at, but we're helping to elevate behavioral health, decrease that stigma so people will access those services if it's in, you know, the languages that they speak or just going to seek care. And I think that's one of the big things that my partnership with Jamie really focuses on being operational at the community health needs assessment is ensuring that everything that we do is decreasing stigma and increasing access to lifesaving care.
00:09:09:05 - 00:09:30:09
Jamie Elmasu
And if I can add some further color to that, I love what you're saying about ecosystems. And I think what we really do with our community health improvement initiatives is we go to maybe sometimes untraditional locations, right? So, for example, we are recently starting a partnership with the East Bay center for Performing Arts. Some people might say, okay, why are you partnering with an arts center?
00:09:30:09 - 00:09:55:02
Jamie Elmasu
This is an arts youth center based in Richmond, California. And my answer is because the need is high and what are we doing? We're actually helping them build their infrastructure to create more on site, licensed clinical social workers so that all of the children that are accessing the services at the East Bay center for Performing Arts, they actually have with embedded within their programing direct access to these social services.
00:09:55:05 - 00:10:16:19
Jamie Elmasu
And I think just by you know, helping shape that model at a center like this, in a high need area, that's really what we're talking about when it comes to ecosystem. And then secondarily, you know, it's other sites. So for example, we're deeply invested in the city of Antioch, that's in Contra Costa County as well, there are reported, you know, high rates of violence in Antioch.
00:10:16:19 - 00:10:37:17
Jamie Elmasu
So what we've actually invested in is actually hiring and helping support mental health therapists. These are licensed therapists to be onsite at the schools in the Antioch Unified School District, and then in partnership with other health systems, they've actually help support, you know, wellness rooms and trauma informed specialists that are also onsite in the school district for the year.
00:10:37:24 - 00:10:55:09
Jamie Elmasu
So it's really around, you know, shaping that ecosystem, whether it's at the school level, at the hospital level, with the nonprofit organizations and how we do it, how do we adjust? How do we actually ask our partnerships and ask the collaboratives that we work with what iterations do we need to actually meet the needs of the community?
00:10:55:16 - 00:11:22:24
Jordan Steiger
And you're both bringing up so many important things with this topic. So I think, Jesse, I mean, bringing up the topic of stigma, I feel like you can't talk about behavioral health without talking about stigma. And I think, Jamie, some of those examples that you just provided really purposefully or maybe not even, you know, purposefully decrease stigma in so many ways when you're just in the community, you are just there and you are part of it and it's, you know, people can get the care that they need without having to go see a provider.
00:11:22:26 - 00:11:39:25
Jordan Steiger
It's where they need it and when they need it. And I think that is so key. And one thing you both have talked a lot about is just these partnerships that you have internally. It sounds like across your system and then of course in the community. How did you get buy in for those partnerships, especially with the community partners?
00:11:39:27 - 00:12:01:29
Jamie Elmasu
Gosh, how do we get buy-in? I think it's a long history, right? It's a long history of relationship building and really gaining trust with community partners. I'd like to say that our partnership model with nonprofit organizations in our area is very strong. And it's because we listen. So we have a grantmaking portfolio. So we are providing grant funding to nonprofit organizations.
00:12:02:02 - 00:12:27:05
Jamie Elmasu
But it doesn't stop there. And I think that's really what sets John Muir Health apart from other health systems, really, is that our partnerships with nonprofit organizations, we also provide many in-kind services where for example, we'll bring our family medicine residents to nonprofit organizations on site to offer some sort of an intervention, whether it's health education or foot screenings or, you know, ask a doctor stations, things like that.
00:12:27:12 - 00:12:51:04
Jamie Elmasu
We've gone to Mental Health Connections, which is previously known as Putnam Clubhouse. But we've had this very robust partnership with Mental Health Connections over the years. And our family residents, they actually circulate there and they provide health education lectures to the clients of mental health connections about, you know, medication management, sleep hygiene, any topics of interest to the client based
00:12:51:07 - 00:12:52:24
Jamie Elmasu
at the organization.
00:12:52:26 - 00:13:15:20
Jesse Tamplen
Jamie does an incredible job in creating those external partnerships, and she has that grantmaking portfolio. So she's able to fund many services which can help align those, you know, partnerships. But, you know, having John Muir be a nonprofit health care system, we spend a lot of time with our operational leaders and our clinicians joining community groups.
00:13:15:20 - 00:13:38:12
Jesse Tamplen
So I'll give you an example. We have people on the Concord Chamber of Commerce. We work with our fire departments. We work with our school districts, part of the California Hospital Association, you know, working in the Tri-Valley region, where Jamie was discussing, making sure that there's grants coming on. We're supporting that grant award process for other organizations, their community needs assessment.
00:13:38:12 - 00:14:11:00
Jesse Tamplen
And I think that's critical when you look at behavioral health operational leaders. Because stigma is reduced when people see not only people who have mental health challenges speak up and, you know, do something different, but also people who are leading those services, taking their time to work with the chief of police. So many times, both at Walnut Creek and Concord, two local cities, they've held their staff meetings at our outpatient behavioral health before, so that they can see our clinicians, get to know them
00:14:11:05 - 00:14:33:18
Jesse Tamplen
and that's where we really look at decreasing the stigma. And when you look at what are the results of stigma in the United States, we know people with a serious mental illness are dying 25 years younger than the average population, but they're not dying due to their mental illness. This is where the stigma comes in. They're dying due to cardiovascular disease, obesity and diabetes.
00:14:33:20 - 00:14:58:11
Jesse Tamplen
And as a nonprofit health system, we are perfectly positioned to be able to treat those conditions because it's part of that whole person care model that we know if we can get them into access their mental health conditions and we can stabilize that life saving treatment, we then can get them to primary care in other groups where we can give back years of life and quality of life.
00:14:58:14 - 00:15:25:07
Jordan Steiger
That makes so much sense, Jesse. And I mean, I hear from both of you, I think just kind of key takeaways from this discussion. It sounds like using that positionality in your community as an anchor institution and as, you know, a leader in the community to make sure that we are doing what we can as hospitals and health systems to decrease that stigma to, you know, extend the hand first and get, you know, get those partnerships moving, really listen to the community and what they need.
00:15:25:09 - 00:15:42:13
Jordan Steiger
It sounds like you are doing all the right things, and you are setting such a great example. Thank you so much, both of you, for being here today. And I'm sure our listeners are going to have a lot of takeaways that they can start thinking about at their own organizations. So again, thank you for being here.
00:15:42:16 - 00:15:50:28
Tom Haederle
Thanks for listening to Advancing Health. Please subscribe and rate us five stars on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.



