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Spotlight Magellan Health: Emily Ferris

After experiencing for herself the benefits of Magellan Health’s youth leaders inspiring future empowerment program, also known as MY LIFE®, Emily Ferris, national director of youth empowerment, has been an integral part of the team working to reimagine the program. Ferris’ main responsibility in her role includes supporting recovery and resiliency initiatives. Also, as a certified peer support specialist, Ferris uses her lived experience of mental health recovery to help increase opportunities for young people to develop their resiliency. In the recovery and resiliency department, Ferris is focused on providing community-based engagement opportunities for young adults from a peer support perspective. Continue reading to learn more about Ferris’ work with recovery and resiliency:

 

What new and innovative projects are you currently working on at Magellan?

I’m really excited about the MY LIFE® initiative which Magellan launched in 2008. We’re currently working on relaunching MY LIFE® in our public sector businesses. We’re doing some exciting work around figuring out what the next iteration of the program will look like and how to keep providing the great educational and community integration opportunities that we’ve always had. We’re looking at the program holistically so we can continue to evolve to meet the needs of those individuals that we serve while moving the program into the future.

Why is Magellan the best place to do this project?

Magellan is really the only place to do this type of project in terms of being a leader. For years, Magellan has supported youth development and collaborated with youth serving systems. Since MY LIFE® began in 2008, Magellan has really focused on this population and the underlying principle that the program should be youth guided. Magellan has been actively investing in youth and young adults, we’re really leaders in that. Young people are at a crucial stage in the development of their future social, civic, economic, and vocational success. We recognize that it’s important for young adults to get excellent clinical services, but they also need opportunities to develop community and leadership skills. A lot of what we do is just giving young adults space to take on leadership and trusting in their abilities and strengths.

As a young person in my early twenties, I was introduced to MY LIFE® and through the program, I got the opportunity to tell my own recovery story, learn leadership skills, and learn how to advocate for myself and others. I can’t imagine any other organization being able to replicate the kind of success and work that Magellan has had with MY LIFE®. We have a whole team across many different lines of business who are really committed to offering youth opportunities to grow.

Could you expand more on your personal experience with MY LIFE® and how that’s helping you to provide input as the program is reimagined?

I’m an individual in recovery from an eating disorder and other various mental health conditions. I was really struggling with my mental health in my adolescence and early twenties and was connected to clinical services, but not successfully. I didn’t have a lot of hope, and it wasn’t that I didn’t believe in recovery, I just didn’t believe in it for myself. I was then connected with a community organization in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and that organization introduced me to peer support. Peer supporters are people who have lived experience of mental health or substance use recovery and they receive training and become certified to offer non-clinical support to other people on their recovery journey. I started to do some advocacy work through that organization which connected me to the MY LIFE® program. At the time, MY LIFE® offered monthly meetings that would offer motivational speakers and other educational opportunities. I got connected to some training programs through MY LIFE® and was eventually certified as a peer specialist.

I really credit the combination of those two programs with providing me with the skills I needed to develop a career. There isn’t anything more personally meaningful for me than having the opportunity to provide that same education and learning to other young people.

I worked for that community-run organization for a while before being hired with the Pennsylvania Health Choices Business, where I facilitated the Bucks County MY LIFE® program for almost five years. That was an opportunity to work directly with youth and to have them provide us with guidance as a serving system, to provide opportunities to them to learn and develop their own programming. They helped us launch a lot of great clinical programs in Bucks County and other educational events for the community.

I’m deeply committed to the program because I have not only benefited from it myself, but I’ve seen the benefits that it offers for other young people. I also never want to downplay MY LIFE’s® collaborations with community-based organizations that provide youth with the connections, knowledge, resources, and appropriate engagement that they need.

What are your thoughts on the culture at Magellan, and how has that culture impacted these projects?

In my experience at Magellan, there is a lot of willingness to collaborate with others doing great work in the communities that we serve. I think that just makes us stronger as an organization. There’s also a culture of growth at Magellan that has benefited me. The opportunities to be really engaged not only in what we’re doing well, but to also be incredibly supportive around making sure that we are continuously evolving to meet the needs of the people that we serve.

In what direction do you see healthcare going in the future?

I think peer support is increasingly being recognized as an essential offering for people, particularly youth and young adults. There’s still a lot of stigmas around mental health and substance use and work to be done about that, but we’re seeing the evidence that peer support is invaluable to people’s recovery. I can speak personally to the power of peer support. I think finding opportunities for people with lived experience to offer leadership is important. We’re starting to see more of that across the board in the healthcare setting.

 

 




Spotlight Magellan Health: Stephanie Cassanese

Since joining Magellan Behavioral Health of Pennsylvania (Magellan) two years ago, Stephanie Cassanese, stays busy in Cambria County supporting many different aspects of Magellan’s business in the Pennsylvania counties served by Magellan. In her role as supervisor of Recovery and Resiliency Services, Cassanese first and foremost leads the recovery and resiliency team and leads MY LIFE for Pennsylvania, where she oversees all aspects of the youth and young adult program for all Magellan counties.

“I do many things and every day here is different which is one of the reasons I love the job. It’s never the same day twice,” said Cassanese. Continue reading to learn more about the many innovative initiatives Cassanese and her team are working on at Magellan:

What project have you recently worked on that is impactful?

My team completed a project at the end of 2022 called the Peer Professional Employment Guide. It’s a workbook that we provide to new certified peer support (CPS) professionals with the goal of providing a source of advice and inspiration. This was a part of our Workforce Development Project that we’re continuing into 2023 post-COVID. There have been staffing shortages in every industry, but particularly in mental health. We’ve struggled to find and retain workers, so this is a part of our hope to retain newly trained peer professionals. There are a lot of individuals that get into peer support and don’t know what they’re getting into. The workbook shares information on everything from getting hired, interviewing, ethics, boundaries, and self-care. We also include testimonials from working peer professionals, so that individuals coming into peer support know what to expect.

Why is Magellan Behavioral Health of Pennsylvania the best place to work on creative projects?

Magellan is more than just a managed care organization; we really want to collaborate with the counties that we serve. I think Magellan encourages relationship building and that’s really the core tenet of my job, just building relationships with our county and provider partners and reassuring them that if they have questions or need any peer support related information, they can come to me. That’s something that Magellan really promotes collaboration and the idea of going above and beyond.

What are your thoughts on the culture at Magellan Behavioral Health of Pennsylvania? How has that culture impacted your team?

The culture here is really to be collaborators with our counties and providers. I think what differentiates us from other managed care organizations is that we’re not just the people that pay the claims. More than that, we try to be present at different events together with other stakeholders. Leadership is supportive; they want us to be out there in Pennsylvania communities, and leadership is always looking to help make that happen. We always strive to do better than we did the day before, that’s the culture here.

What exciting trends in the healthcare industry have you noticed? In what direction do you see healthcare going in? What lessons are there to learn from other industries that can be applied to healthcare?

The biggest one that comes to mind is the focus that the state and federal government is putting on suicide prevention and education. Since COVID, suicide rates have skyrocketed, and people are feeling more isolated and lonelier than they ever have before. This can also be related to another research push I’ve seen recently, which is on the impact of social media on youth and young adults on FOMO (the fear of missing out), self-esteem, and body image issues. I think that focusing on both, post-COVID, is going to be important.  Self-care has become common, and I think it is important that we encourage people to focus on caring for themselves, both physically and mentally. Magellan has also implemented a suicide risk assessment plan to identify members who may need additional support or treatment.

The healthcare industry also continues to conduct research focusing on things that are significantly impacting mental health, post-COVID. This is also more of a focus because our physical health and our mental health are one. When you’re struggling with your mental health, then your physical health will suffer and vice versa. I hope we continue with that direction because they are not two separate things. We’re one body, soul, spirit, and mind and it’s all connected.




Spotlight Magellan Health: Greg Dicharry

For Greg Dicharry, his work at Magellan Healthcare is not just a job, it’s a passion. Filming and directing documentaries highlighting suicide awareness has been a welcome side gig of Dicharry’s job as national youth empowerment director at Magellan. For the past 14 years, Dicharry has been connecting with people affected in some way by suicide, substance use and other mental health concerns. From those experiences, he launched the MY LIFE (Magellan Youth Leaders Inspiring Future Empowerment) program. MY LIFE provides various activities and workshops for youths ages 13 to 23-year-olds nationally who have experience with mental health, substance use, juvenile justice or foster care-related issues or have a friend or family member coping with these issues. Dicharry’s latest documentary project, “My Ascension,” shows the crippling effects suicide can have on families while telling the captivating personal story of a suicide survivor. Continue reading to learn more about the MY LIFE program and Dicharry’s upcoming documentary.

What sort of projects are you currently working on?

My main responsibility at Magellan is overseeing our MY LIFE program, which we created in 2008 as part of our Maricopa County, Arizona contract. Since 2008, MY LIFE has been leading the way nationally for youth involved in behavioral health and foster care systems. Through regular meetings, special events, performances, social media, and local and national presentations, youth share their stories and support each other in their recovery goals. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Magellan launched the Stay Home for MY LIFE virtual youth fest series in 2020. I also do a lot around suicide prevention for the Company and am a part of the new Suicide Center of Excellence. In my spare time, I create documentaries. Over the last three years I’ve been working on a documentary called “My Ascension.” Prior to that I had done another documentary called “Suicide: The Ripple Effect” but this new one is on teen suicide. I made it with a young lady who is a suicide attempt survivor. She attempted to take her life by gunshot and the result was that she is now paralyzed. She had this rebirth through that and now uses her experience to help others via speaking and advocacy, so the story is largely her story but also of other young people in the community who were successful in their suicide attempts and the aftermath of how that has affected their families.

“My Ascension” will premiere nationally on PBS (Public Broadcasting Service) in September. The primary distribution method has been virtual community screening around the country. We’ve done screenings with a couple of universities and several advocacy and mental health groups.

What inspires you to create these documentaries?

I dabbled in film and media throughout high school and college. When I moved to Los Angeles I started working on projects like movies, award shows, commercials and music videos and learning that way.

With the MY LIFE program, I had gotten a camera through Magellan and was able to start producing videos with the youth group so that got me back into filming and then I met a man through work, who’s a suicide attempt survivor, we became friends and he approached me wanting to make a documentary and I helped him with producing and directing. I didn’t plan on doing another documentary, but the opportunity came to tell this very compelling story for “My Ascension” that could reach a lot of young people and empower them in helping them to share their stories.

I also have a personal connection to this where I’ve found myself struggling with suicidal thoughts, and my cousin who was bipolar with a substance abuse issue and died by suicide about 20 years ago. I saw the impact that had on his family and that inspired me to be interested in the topic.

Why is Magellan the best place to do this project?

Magellan is open to innovation, even though it’s a big company everyone is open to new ideas to help better serve our members and customers. For example, with MY LIFE I came up with the idea to do this, it wasn’t something that was a part of my job description or something Magellan had ever done. But they let me run with it and it was successful. People saw the value of it and saw that the opportunity to serve our members and provide them with something in a different way.

With the documentaries, my job had allowed me to be able to do that kind of stuff on the side and it ended up being another way to connect with people differently way and blend the work I’m doing here.

What are your thoughts on the culture here at Magellan? How has the culture at Magellan impacted your project?

It’s a culture that’s open to innovation and that’s open for doing unique things that are engaging for our customers. It’s very supportive, encouraging, and positive work happening here.

  • Learn more about MY LIFE here.

 




MY LIFE: Youth-Inspired and Inspiring

Mike* was dancing wildly to hip hop music before running up to me and confidently stating, “I’m a leader.” He told me about how he ran to be a class officer and lost but how he was not going to give up. He talked about his search for a life-long mentor and how he wanted to make the world a better place. Not the type of random conversation you would expect at an outdoor community event, but MY LIFE youth are not average.

Since 2007, Magellan Youth Leaders Inspiring Future Empowerment, or MY LIFE, has proactively sought to change the trajectory of young lives engaged in the foster care and juvenile justice systems, as well as youth with behavioral challenges. Led by Greg Dicharry, Magellan’s national director for youth empowerment, monthly MY LIFE groups and annual MY FEST events have provided thousands of youth an opportunity to connect to their community and hear stories of overcoming hardships and reaching for their full potential. In Florida alone, groups in Tallahassee, Orlando and West Palm Beach enable over 100 youth ages 13 to 23 to meet monthly in a safe environment where fun and inspiration are plentiful.

Getting to spend time with youth involved in MY LIFE underscores the impact. One young man who has been attending a Florida MY LIFE group for three years described how the motivational speaker’s life lessons inspired him to focus on his future instead of focusing on his past. He told me about the hard times he was going through now and how the stories of the speakers going through tragic times provided him with the feeling that “it’s not too late for me.” It was a tough thought to imagine that at only 16 years old, this young man felt like the cards had already been stacked against him. MY LIFE provides a consistent message that he and his peers have the power and support to create a future different from their current reality.

And then there was Mike with his boundless energy. He may never lose that energy, which could either lead him down a path that is damaging to himself and others, or one that honors his strengths and abilities as he contributes to society. MY LIFE has helped him set upon the latter path. His future can now be one where his energy is directed into developing his leadership skills, pursuing higher education and a meaningful career, despite the challenges he might face at home or at school.

MY LIFE is just one way Magellan is supporting young leaders to help make our communities stronger.

*Mike is not this individual’s real name.