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Integrating Mental Health into Advanced Primary Care – Why and How

Integrating Mental Health into Advanced Primary Care – Why and How. Neil Korsen , MD, MS Medical Director Mental Health Integration Program MaineHealth. Outline. Background – Why Integration? Screening for common mental health conditions

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Integrating Mental Health into Advanced Primary Care – Why and How

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  1. Integrating Mental Health into Advanced Primary Care – Why and How Neil Korsen, MD, MS Medical Director Mental Health Integration Program MaineHealth

  2. Outline • Background – Why Integration? • Screening for common mental health conditions • Improving access to and communication with mental health specialists • Building an integrated team

  3. Why Integration? • 1 in 4 people seeking primary health care services have a significant mental health condition. Spitzer, JAMA 1999; Kessler, Arch Gen Psych 2005 • >50% of people treated for depression receive all treatment in primary care. Katon, Arch Gen Psych 1996 • Only 41% with mental health conditions receive any treatment Wang, Lane, Olfsen et al; Arch Gen Psych, 2005 • Management of common chronic illnesses often includes a need for changes in behaviors (e.g., diet & exercise). • People’s life problems and stresses affect their health and their health care.

  4. Behavioral Health in PCMH • Behavioral health is integral to overall health as mind and body are inseparable. • Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative • Most people with poor mental health are cared for in primary care settings, despite many barriers. Efforts to provide everyone a medical home will require the inclusion of mental health care if it is to succeed in improving care and reducing costs. • Petterson et al, American Family Physician 2008

  5. Standardized Screening & Assessment Specialty Mental Health Support for Behavioral Change Mental Health Treatment & Consultation Care Management Patient Centered Medical Home mental/behavioral health components Access Community Resources e.g., NAMI

  6. Integrated Care – MHI Program Involvement

  7. Behavioral-Physical Integration • Participate in baseline assessment of current behavioral-physical health integration capacity • Take steps to make improvement(s), e.g., • Implement a system to routinely conduct a standard assessment for depression (e.g., PHQ-9) in patients with chronic illness • Incorporate a behavioral health clinician into the practice to assist with chronic condition management • Co-locate behavioral health services within the practice

  8. Levels of Integration Further modified from Doherty, McDaniel, and Baird - 1996

  9. Screening for Common Mental Health Conditions

  10. Screening and Assessment

  11. Screening and Assessment • Addresses under-recognition of common mental health conditions • Change ideas: • Choose • a high risk population • one or more conditions for screening (depression, anxiety, substance use) • Implement a process • to routinely screen • to use screening results

  12. Which condition(s)? • Depression – recommended by US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) to screen adults and adolescents • Anxietydisorders - not recommended by USPSTF, but a common co-morbidity with depression • Substance use – recommended by USPSTF for adults

  13. Which Population(s) to Screen? • Health maintenance visits • Chronic illnesses • COPD • CVD • Diabetes • Other high risk populations • Chronic pain • Children with home or school behavior problems • People who have been hospitalized

  14. Developing a Screening Process • Identify population to be screened • Identify condition(s) to screen for • Develop processes to get screening done • Assign roles to members of practice team • Develop processes to take action for those who screen positive

  15. PHQ-9 • A validated tool for screening and diagnosing depression and for following response to treatment • Scoring parallels DSM-IV diagnosis for Major and Minor Depression • Can be administered in ‘interview’ style or completed by patient

  16. Screening for Depression: The first two questions of the PHQ-9 have been validated as a sensitive way to screen for depression • 96% of people with depression will say yes to one of those two questions. • Consider an answer of ‘2’ or ‘3’ on either of those questions a positive screen. • Administer the full PHQ-9 only to those who screen positive

  17. Scoring the PHQ-9 • Add columns vertically for the first 9 questions then tally across the bottom of the page • Total score from 0 to 27 • 10th question is a “Function Score” indicating to what degree the depression symptoms have made it difficult for the patient to function in their everyday life • The degree of functional difficulty can help you decide whether to start active treatment in people with mild symptoms.

  18. Guideline for Using the PHQ-9 for Initial Management

  19. What is Watchful Waiting? • It is estimated that a third of people with symptoms at this level will recover without treatment. • Watchful waiting means you are seeing the patient about once a month and monitoring their PHQ-9 score, but not starting active treatment. • Self-care activities such as exercise or relaxation are usually a component of watchful waiting. • If the patient’s symptoms have not resolved after 2-3 months, active treatment ought to be considered.

  20. How often should the PHQ be done for management of a patient with depression? • Once a month until the patient reaches remission (score 0-4) or for the first 6 months of treatment • Every 3 months after that while the patient is on active treatment • Once a year for people with a history of depression who are no longer on active treatment

  21. Interpreting Follow Up Scores

  22. Goals of Treatment • Remission – score of 0-4 after an initial score of 10 or higher. • Clinical response – score of less than 10 after an initial score of 10 or higher

  23. Improving Access and Communication

  24. Mental health referrals

  25. Mental health referrals • Improve communication & coordination with mental health specialists within or outside your practice • Change ideas include: • ID mental health specialists who care for many of your patients and meet with them • Develop templates for communication, include patient consent • Improve tracking for patients referred for mental health care

  26. Building an Integrated Team

  27. Integrated Team Function

  28. Developing an Integrated Team • Change ideas include: • Regular team meetings • Morning huddles to • anticipate and plan for • patient needs that day • Use warm handoffs to onsite mental health staff

  29. Mental Health Specialist Diagnose, Treat Team Roles in Integrated Primary Care Patient and Family Primary Care Clinician Support Staff Screen,Diagnose, Treat Care Manager Follow up, Family Adherence Patient Education NAMI Community Resources, Family Support Psychiatrist Or APRN Consult, Train

  30. Mission Goals Culture – Primary Care Roles Culture – Mental Health Processes/Procedures Interpersonal Relationships Beckhard, R. Optimizing Team-Building Efforts. Contemporary Journal of Business, Summer 1972. Team Effectiveness Model

  31. Mental Health Specialist in Primary Care: How about those differences?

  32. The Questions for Integrated Care Settings Who will be delivering the service? What service will be delivered and what code will be used? Whoare the partners doing integration? Wherewill the service be delivered? Whatis the “facility”? Under what license? Whowill “employ” staff? Whowill do the billing? Howwill the reimbursement work? Whichinsurance will be billed? What are the rules for that insurer?

  33. Start where you are Use what you’ve got Do what you can Arthur Ashe

  34. Resources: Websites • www.integratedprimarycare.com – National clearinghouse site for information on integrated care out of U Mass. • www.nationalcouncil.org - The unifying voice of America’s behavioral health organizations. Includes resources for providers and a link to the National Council’s journal. • www.ibhp.org - Integrated Behavioral Health Project. Good general information on integrated care site out of California. • www.pcpcc.net - Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative. National resource devoted to developing and advancing the patient centered medical home. Books • Blount, A. ed.(1998). Integrated Primary Care: The Future of Medical and Mental Health Collaboration. New York: Norton • Hunter, L., Goodie, J., Oordt, M., & Dobmeyer, A. (2009). Integrated Behavioral Health in Primary Care. Washington, D.C: American Psychological Association • Robinson, P. & Reiter, J. (2006) Behavioral Consultation and Primary Care: a Guide to Integrating Services. New York: Springer Publications • Butler M, Kane RI, McAlpine D, Kathol, RG, Fu SS, Hagedorn H, Wilt TJ. Integration of Mental Health/Substance Abuse and Primary Care No. 173 (Prepared by the Minnesota Evidence-based Practice Center under Contract No. 290-02-009.) AHRQ Publication No. 09-E003. Rockville, MD. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. October 2008.

  35. Contact info: • Cynthia Cartwright, MT RN MSEd, cartwc@mainehealth.org, 662-3529 • Neil Korsen, MD MS, korsen@mainehealth.org, 662-6881 • Mary Jean Mork, LCSW, morkm@mmc.org, 662-2490

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