Hayley Myer • November 26, 2025
RCPA Member KidsPeace’s Healing Magazine Examines Opportunities for Youth, Staff, and Caregiving Organizations in Mental/Behavioral Healthcare
Author
Hayley Myer
Date
November 26, 2025
Share
Press release by KidsPeace: Released November 26, 2025
Excerpt below:
SCHNECKSVILLE, PA (November 26, 2025) — The latest issue of KidsPeace’s Healing Magazine offers readers insights into opportunities for addressing critical needs in the changing world of mental and behavioral healthcare. The Fall/Winter 2025 edition, online now, explores ways patients, staff and provider organizations can take advantage of such opportunities:
- A treatment model called acute partial hospitalization fills the gap for adolescents with needs falling between in-patient treatment and outpatient services.
- A major university seeks to address the need for more skilled workers in child mental health, by creating an entirely new discipline for staff in the field.
- A common approach to making manufacturing operations more efficient has the potential to meet the same need among behavioral health providers.
- Therapists can use the cutting-edge technology of virtual reality to reach their hard-to-treat clients – while their organizations look for ways to make the identification and use of technological advancements part of their culture.

By Tim Sohosky
•
May 29, 2026
On Thursday, May 28, the Office of Developmental Programs (ODP) provided an update to the Medical Assistance Advisory Committee (MAAC) regarding current policies and upcoming regulatory changes following a recent Commonwealth Court decision. On February 17, 2026, the PA Commonwealth Court issued a decision in Dunkelberger v. Department of Human Services that determined that ODP’s limitations on provider model services (specifically the 40/60-hour caps and 90-day travel maximums) were null and void. The decision was based on process rather than policy validity; the Court found that these limitations were not properly promulgated as regulations in accordance with the Commonwealth Documents Law and Regulatory Review Act. To maintain a balanced approach between flexibility and oversight, ODP is moving forward with the following actions: Regulatory Amendments: ODP will amend regulations to establish formal authority for setting service delivery limits that support individual welfare and program integrity. Self-Directed Model Agreements: ODP has already modified agreements for self-directed models to clarify limits on overtime, combined relative service provision, and travel restrictions. Travel Restrictions: Due to the inability to monitor services effectively over long distances, service provision will now be limited to Pennsylvania and contiguous states. Waiver Changes: ODP will seek modifications through the amendment process to the Consolidated, P/FDS, Community Living, and Adult Autism Waivers to include: New requirements for agencies providing IHCS and Companion services to disclose a DSP's relationship to participants; and Strengthened programmatic oversight and integrity measures. Life Sharing Alternative: For participants requiring more than 60 hours of paid care from a relative, the Life Sharing (24/7) service model remains the recommended alternative. ODP anticipates a public comment period for these proposed waiver changes beginning in January 2027.

By Cathy Barrick
•
May 28, 2026
The Office of Developmental Programs (ODP) has shared ODPANN 26-039 . The purpose of this communication is to provide updated details about the Residential Performance-Based Contracting (PBC) Pay-for-Performance (P4P) initiatives for Fiscal Year 2026/27. Updates are provided in red . Please review the announcement for more details. Visit here to access the Pay for Performance (P4P): Residential Rural Capacity Expansion Plan template .

