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MHA Overview VIREC Cyberseminar

MHA Overview VIREC Cyberseminar. Kathleen Lysell, PsyD Rick Owen, MD November 20, 2007. Session Objectives. Be familiar with the VHA Mental Health Assistant software, including its use and applications in clinical care; Understand how the software could be used in a research setting;

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MHA Overview VIREC Cyberseminar

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  1. MHA OverviewVIREC Cyberseminar Kathleen Lysell, PsyD Rick Owen, MD November 20, 2007

  2. Session Objectives • Be familiar with the VHA Mental Health Assistant software, including its use and applications in clinical care; • Understand how the software could be used in a research setting; • Understand the process for creation of national database of MHA assessment data; and • Know about how the implementation of the software was evaluated

  3. Mental Health Assistant Software

  4. Mental Health Assistant • Graphical User Interface (GUI) for the Mental Health testing package. • Originally released 2002 • Provides secure computer environment for patient administered testing • Only VistA application currently available that stores survey/self report information as data • 2,800,000 assessments using MHA instruments completed in FY07

  5. Instruments Currently Available in MHA

  6. MHA3 New Features—Patch YS*5.01*85 • MHA files completely restructured in VistA • Launch from CPRS Tools Menu • Pass progress note to CPRS • New Instruments for MH Screening, nursing, TBI • With clinical reminders patch 6, all MHA instruments will work with reminders • Reminders will be able to use MH scales and individual responses in finding logic

  7. Current System MH Test Files

  8. MH Files New with Patch YS*5.01*85

  9. What does file structure mean? • Old structure, results only stored as response string TTFT, report recalculated on the fly every time test accessed • Very difficult to research test results on long tests • All tests had to be coded into system using mumps

  10. New File Structure • Series of connected files that store entire test administration data • Can evaluate scales, questions, raw or transformed scores rather than just response strings • Greatly facilitates addition of new test content—create instrument using Delphi tool that translates it to mumps file structure • HL7 messaging used to create national testing database

  11. New Instruments Added in MHA3 • BOMC (Blessed Orientation Memory Concentration) Test • Braden Skin Risk Assessment • Morse Falls Risk Scale • PHQ-2 • PC-PTSD • TBI 2nd Level Evaluation

  12. Modified Instruments in MHA3 • AUD-C: Invoke Skip Logic; add option “Never” as response to Item 1 and “0” as response to Item 2 • PHQ-9: Add 10th question regarding impact of symptoms on overall functioning

  13. PHQ-9 Test Form in MHA3

  14. MHA Research Example—AUDIT-C • AUDIT-C response strings from alcohol use screens were extracted from VistA at a VA facility (n=65,484 AUDC response strings) for a 2 year period. • 90 combinations were identified for all AUDIT-C scores. 11 response strings were identified that equal a score of 4 (see chart). • The most common drinking pattern representing a score of 4 was 400 (n= 11387, 17% of all combinations) - drinking 1-2 drinks daily, but never drinking > 6 drinks per occasion (binge drinking). The “400” response string accounted for 83% of all scores equaling 4. • There were 1249 (1.9% of all combinations) occurrences where the score was 4 and the response string indicated binge drinking, as represented by any response string with a 3rd digit of 1 or more (e.g. 211,301,112). This pattern accounted for 9% of all scores equaling 4.

  15. AUD-C Response String Frequency

  16. Item checked equals 2 points Item checked equals 1 point Item checked equals 1 point AUDIT-C Response Samples

  17. Enhancements in Clinical Reminders • Clinical Reminders updated it’s code with patch PXRM*2.0*6, to work with new MH files • Can work with MH scale within an instrument, or specific item within an instrument as reminder finding

  18. Reminders Using MH Item Response • FINDING ITEM: AUDC// • MH SCALE: 276//default of scales associated with the instrument • CONDITION: I V("R",1)="Four or more times a week“ if the value of response to Item 1 is “four or more times a week”

  19. AUD-C Response String in Reminder Logic • Condition: I V("R",1)=“Four or more times a week” • Condition: I V("R",2)="3 or 4" • Condition: I V("R",3)="Never" • Function String: FI(2)&FI(3)&FI(4) Expanded Function String: FI(AUDC,R,1)&FI(AUDC,R,2)&FI(AUDC,R,3) Found Text: Patient who might drink less than the safe limits.

  20. Using Reminders with MH Instruments • Identify population, desired frequency of measurement • MH Performance Measures, FY08 • PHQ-9, AUD-C, PC-PTSD • PC MH Integration Assessment • PHQ-9, BAI, PCL, AUD-C

  21. Testing Database • MH testing data stored in local VistA files • MHA3 enhancements also create national testing database • Test administrations transmitted using HL7 messaging • Physically located in Pittsburgh, MH Informatics section • Only includes test administration data, only data generated after MHA3 patch is installed in local system • Establishing protocols for data usage with Austin Corporate Data Warehouse

  22. Project Review, Lessons Learned

  23. Business Case • MHA is a national software package; the mental health package was one of the early clinical packages in VistA • Significant cost savings/benefit identified in automating psychological testing process • Improved clinical processes demonstrated

  24. Expanding Presence • Software historically limited to MH usage, but functionality valuable in other clinical settings • Identified as tool that will store self report information as data rather than text • Useful in decision support • Easy to add content in environment where new development is difficult to fund • Interact with clinical areas that have specific assessment by self report needs to broaden investment • Integrate with CPRS • Provide tools requested by program offices

  25. Approval Process • Submit Project Requests to HISEB • HISEB prioritizes all requests in portfolio • IDMC reviews priorities of 5 HISEB’s • Funding based on budget from Congress • Executive priorities funded off the top • Multi-year projects that are approved receive funding priority in subsequent years

  26. Issues • Sites do not utilize full capacity of package • Perception that it is only for psychological testing • Adequate resources to have computers and space to use for patient administration • Extended period of significant restriction of development resources • Uncertainty around VA software development strategies

  27. Next Steps

  28. Clinical Content • Immediate goal • Suicide prevention, TBI follow-up evaluation—high visibility, high priority items • Behavioral health—pain • Mental health—recovery oriented assessment tools • Geriatrics, HBPC assessment tools

  29. Authoring Tool • Use to build local instruments • Delphi application—no programming experience necessary • Builds questionnaires with scoring rules and reports templates

  30. VUID • Veteran Unique Identifier • Link to Enterprise Reference Terminology • Using SNOMED to code each item in MH tests • Provide Standardized coding/terminology associated with elements of assessments

  31. References • Graham, A., et al. (2007). Effect of using different modes to administer the AUDIT-C on identification of hazardous drinking and acquiescence to trial participation among injured patients. Alcohol and Alcoholism, 42, 423-429 • Bush, K., et al. (1998). The AUDIT Alcohol Consumption Questions (AUDIT-C) An Effective Brief Screening Test for Problem Drinking. Archives of Internal Medicine, 158, 1789-1795. • Achtmeyer, C et al (2007). Using Mental Health Assistant AUDIT-C Data to Describe Patterns of Alcohol Use.  VeHU Conference, Orlando, FL. http://vaww.vehu.med.va.gov/vehu/vehu2007/ppt/9903_LL.ppt

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