CBHC Integrated Care Mapping Project

Welcome to the Colorado Behavioral Healthcare Council’s

Integrated Care Mapping Project!

Colorado’s community mental health providers are committed to the vision of an integrated healthcare delivery system that provides the best quality care and improved access to services.  To best serve both body and mind, members of the Colorado Behavioral Healthcare Council have embarked on collaborative programs with other healthcare providers around the state.  Use the map below to find out where these important programs are taking place and the strategies being used to succeed!  

LEGEND:

BLUE = Collaboration with Local Health Department or Social Services

GREEN = Collaboration with Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC)

LIGHT BLUE = Collaboration with Community Non-profit Organization

PINK = Collaboration with Non-profit Clinic or Hospital Clinic designated as a Community Funded Safety Net Clinic (CSNC)

PURPLE = Primary Care Services Collaboration at a Community Mental Health Center (CMHC)

RED = School Based Health Center

RED CROSS – Collaboration with Hospital or Hospital Clinic designated as a Rural Health Clinic (RHC)

YELLOW = Collaboration with Private Primary Care Practice

Click on any of the place markers to read a summary of the program and follow the links provided to access detailed informational profiles for each of the collaborative efforts.

View Colorado Integration Programs on Google Maps webpage


About the Types of Collaboration Model:

The Types of Systematic Collabortion Model was used by CBHC to categorize the types of collaborative efforts being undertaken by Colorado’s community mental health system.  This model was adapted from the Collaborative Family Healthcare Association’s (CFHA) Five Levels of Primary Care/Behavioral Healthcare Collaboration Model  by Macaran A. Baird, M.D., William J. Doherty, Ph.D., and Susan H. McDaniel, Ph.D. and modified by Bern Health, Ph.D. and Pam Wise Romero, Ph.D, Axis Health System, for the Colorado Integrated Care Learning Community. 

The model provides a helpful framework to be used by organizations “to evaluate their current structures and procedures in light of their goals for collaboration, and to set realistic next steps for change,” as suggested by its original authors.

Click here for more information about the Types of Systematic Collaboration Model used for this project.

Questions? Comments?  Contact Brian Turner at bturner@cbhc.org