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Effective healthcare program initiatives in future CER/PCOR in mental health

September 19, 2011 AHRQ Annual Conference Sonia Tyutyulkova , MD, PhD Center for Outcomes and Evidence, AHRQ. Effective healthcare program initiatives in future CER/PCOR in mental health. Stakeholder Engagement Group Scientific Resource Center.

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Effective healthcare program initiatives in future CER/PCOR in mental health

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  1. September 19, 2011 AHRQ Annual Conference Sonia Tyutyulkova, MD, PhD Center for Outcomes and Evidence, AHRQ Effective healthcare program initiatives in future CER/PCOR in mental health

  2. Stakeholder Engagement Group Scientific Resource Center RTI International-University of North Carolina Evidence-based Practice Center • Shannon Brode, MPH • Daniel E. Jonas, MD, MPH • Alyssa J. Mansfield, MPH, PhD • Brian B. Sheitman, MD • Elizabeth Tant • MeeraViswanathan, PhD • Lea C. Watson, MD, MPH DEcIDE Mental Health Consortium Coordinating Center • Stephen Crystal • Tobias Gerhardt • ShereeNessee-Todd • Mark Olfson • Harold Pincus • Teresa Viggiano

  3. Comparative Effectiveness Research “CER is the conduct and synthesis of research comparing the benefits and harms of different interventions and strategies to prevent, diagnose, treat and monitor health conditions in “real world” settings.” “The purpose of this research is to improve health outcomes by developing and disseminating evidence-based information to patients, clinicians and other decision makers responding to their needs.”

  4. Patient-Centered Outcomes Research • Assesses the benefits and harms of preventive, diagnostic, therapeutic, or health delivery system interventions to inform decision making, highlighting comparisons and outcomes that matter to people; • Is inclusive of an individual's preferences, autonomy and needs, focusing on outcomes that people notice and care about such as survival, function, symptoms, and health-related quality of life; • Incorporates a wide variety of settings and diversity of participants to address individual differences and barriers to implementation and dissemination; • Investigates (or may investigate) optimizing outcomes while addressing burden to individuals, resources, and other stakeholder perspectives.

  5. Created in 2005, authorized by Section 1013 of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act (MMA) of 2003 To improve the quality, effectiveness, and efficiency of health care delivered through Medicare, Medicaid, and S-CHIP programs Focus on Clinical effectiveness Comparative Effectiveness Effective Health Care Program

  6. Effective Healthcare Program Structure

  7. Stakeholder Driven Research Raphael, 1509-1511, The School of Athens, Fresco, Apostolic Palace, Rome, Vatican City

  8. Series of Stakeholder Meetings 2010 - 2011

  9. Process

  10. Need to Fundamentally Change Our Approach to Clinical Research for Serious Mental Illness Rene Magritte (1898-1967), Cecin’est pas une pipe (1926)

  11. Stakeholder Identified Priorities in SMI • Measurements and outcomes need consensus definitions. Develop measurements and outcome assessment tools that are based on a chronic care model rather than the inadequate metrics that exist today that are based on an acute-care model. • Development of infrastructure that supports longitudinal studies and facilitate development of comparable datasets (detailed registries). • Development of CER methodology.

  12. Service delivery, treatment settings, and structuring the delivery of care Make treatment settings and service delivery systems into experiments for studies such as: (a) comparing the effectiveness of different systems for structuring the delivery of care, such as psychiatric medical homes vs. usual care; (b) comparing how variation across settings, systems, and states impacts disparities for specific groups; (c) state-to-state or smaller area comparisons; (d) public systems vs. various models of private insurance; (e) systems that deliver care in teams vs. those settings that deliver care in solo‐health‐practitioner or split-care arrangements; (f) delivery tools, such as prior authorization, and their impact; and (g) ethnic specific provider supports.

  13. Stakeholder Identified Priorities in SMI • Identify disparities and reasons for disparities and reevaluate the framework for researching disparities. • Role of the therapeutic relationship. • Strategies to personalize/individualize treatment. • Treatment approaches to avoid early mortality and morbidity. • Role of the psychiatric hospital, lengths of stay, and transition support services after discharge. • Retooling Universities and Education. • Strategies to increase adherence to evidence-based guidelines and treatment regimens. • Correctional programs and interventions for people involved with the criminal justice system. • Interventions for people with comorbid medical illness or substance abuse. • Prevention, early identification, trajectories, and developmental perspective. • Dissemination and implementation. • Reducing barriers and improving access. • Mental health policy. • Modifiable factors: tobacco, exercise, and nutrition. • Alternatives to force or involuntary approaches. • Providing housing or social support. • Strategies to reduce stigma, prejudice, and discrimination.

  14. System and Care Delivery Interventions

  15. Systematic Reviews and Clinical Practice Guidelines

  16. Effective Health Care Program Guides Policymakers Clinicians Consumers

  17. Evidence-based Practice Centers (EPC) Evidence Reports • Efficacy and Comparative Effectiveness of Off-Label Use of Atypical Antipsychotics • Comparative Effectiveness of First- and Second-Generation Antipsychotics for Children and Young Adults • Antipsychotics in Adults: Comparative Effectiveness of First-Generation versus Second-Generation Medications • Comparative Effectiveness of Second-Generation Antidepressants in the Pharmacologic Treatment of Adult Depression • Non-Pharmacologic Interventions for Treatment-resistant Depression in Adults

  18. Evidence-based Practice Centers (EPC) Evidence Reports • Effectiveness of Practice-based Interventions Addressing Concomitant Mental Health and Chronic Medical Conditions in the Primary Care Setting • Comparison of Characteristics ofNursing Homes and Other Residential Long-Term Care Settings for Persons with Dementia • Treatment Approaches to Avoid Early Morbidity and Mortality in Serious Mental Illness

  19. The Evidence Landscape

  20. Patient-Centered Outcomes Research “How can the health care system improve my chances of achieving the outcomes I prefer?”

  21. http://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/

  22. Stakeholder Identified Priorities DEcIDENetwork • Application and Effectiveness of Quality Measurement and Improvement Strategies to Enhance Care Processes and Outcomes for Individuals with Mental Illness. What evidence-concordant measurement processes and measuresare most appropriate and effective in assessing mental health care and its quality in various settings and plan arrangements? • Integration of General Medical and Behavioral Health Care for Adults with Severe Mental Illness • Improving Mental Health Care Continuity and Transitionsfor Adults with Severe Mental Illness • What is the comparative effectiveness traditional versus technologically enhanced methods (e.g., tele-medicine, computer programs, web-based systems, smart phones, etc.) in delivering evidence-based treatments ? • Structuring Care Delivery at the Provider Level. To what extent will functional outcomes differ for patients seen by clinicians: • with varying frequencies of visits, for varying lengths of office visits, and varying ease of access to clinicians? • In relation to characteristics of the provider and other individual and relationship factors. • What approaches are most effective in identifying individuals with SMI or SED who are at high risk of suicideand of intervening to reduce the risk of completed suicide?

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