📋
Extracted from Consolidated Report

This investigation was originally published as part of a larger consolidated report containing multiple investigations. View the consolidated PDF for the complete document.

Santa Cruz County Grand Jury • 2024-2025

102 Santa Cruz County Civil Grand Jury Sources References

Published: January 01, 2025 31 pages
View PDF View Full Original

Findings 7 findings

F1 Page 129
Data: The Health Services Agency has not developed and deployed analytic, data-driven reports to address the financial challenges in managing the Behavioral Health and Substance Use Disorder services, despite
F2 Page 130
Administrative: The Jury finds that many programs, such as the Focus Intervention Team, Integrated Housing And Recovery Team, 24/7 Mobile Crisis Response Team, and Enhanced Care Management, provide critical services to High-Cost Beneficiaries. Although they have overlapping goals there is little to no coordination for tracking clients that receive services from one or more of these programs. The lack of coordination leads to higher costs in an era of shrinking resources.
F3 Page 130
Clinical: Santa Cruz County does not have a Level of Care Tool to track and manage High-Cost Beneficiaries. The Central California Alliance for Health does have a Level of Care Tool to track and manage High-Cost Beneficiaries. The parties are partners in the delivery of services and their resources could be leveraged to create a unified Level of Care tool.
F4 Page 130
Administrative: Santa Cruz County programs and resources for High-Cost Beneficiaries, and all Health Services Agency behavioral health and substance use disorder services, are siloed and fragmented across HSA departments and contract providers. For example, clinical, financial, and operational benchmarks are not being used to report the cost of services and track patient acuity. As new programs are being developed, the financial, operational, and administrative targets are not established in advance or integrated into operations. County and Alliance collaboration and coordination can pave the way to overcome fragmentation.
F5 Page 130
Data, Clinical & Administrative: The Central California Alliance for Health (Alliance) has substantial financial reserves, and Santa Cruz County has seats on the governing board of the Alliance. Clinical, financial and operational collaboration between these agencies, who are both insurers and providers, needs to be better coordinated and integrated at all levels to improve treatment and outcomes for all clients.
F6 Page 130
Administrative: The Jury finds that the Serving Communities Health Information Organization and the Mental Health Advisory Board partnerships with Santa Cruz County could be better leveraged to have greater impact on Behavioral Health. Failure to leverage these partnerships results in missed opportunities to coordinate programs and services.
F7 Page 130
Compassion: Throughout the Grand Jury investigation, the Jury found that the staff and leadership of the Health Services Agency, Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office, and the Central California Alliance for Health are compassionate in the treatment of people experiencing behavioral health or substance use disorder. Patients are treated with dignity and respect, despite sometimes difficult conditions. High-Cost Beneficiaries published June 26, 2025 2024-2025 Consolidated Final Report 125

Recommendations 8