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The Partnership Access Line Enhancing the Capabilities of Primary Care Mental Health Services Terry Lee, MD University of Washington Evidence Based Practice.

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Presentation on theme: "The Partnership Access Line Enhancing the Capabilities of Primary Care Mental Health Services Terry Lee, MD University of Washington Evidence Based Practice."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Partnership Access Line Enhancing the Capabilities of Primary Care Mental Health Services Terry Lee, MD University of Washington Evidence Based Practice Institute

2 PAL Program Funded By: ► WA Medicaid (DSHS/HRSA) ► WA State Legislature

3 Our Call to Action ► Primary Care Providers (PCPs) are the Front Line of mental health care  Nationally PCPs reported to provide about half of all common mental disorder care  1 in 5 child PCP appointments are for a behavioral health chief complaint ► PCPs are typically uncomfortable with this role  Simply were not trained in mental health W Gardner and K Kelleher, 2000 New Freedom Commission, 2003

4 Why do all of these kids see their PCP instead of a psychiatrist? ► 6.6 child psychiatrists per 100,000 WA children ► This calculates to 1 child psychiatrist for every 820 children with serious emotional disturbance (GAF <50) in Washington C Thomas and C Holzer, 2006 Shaffer et al. 1996 (SED rate 5.4%)

5 Lack of Access to Child Psychiatrists ► Rural area access is abysmal, and is not likely to improve  US mean of 0.3 child psychiatrists per 100,000 youth ► We will not train our way out of this bind by producing more child psychiatrists  No significant increase in trainees for years  Average age of a child psychiatrist is >50 WJ Kim, 2003 C Thomas and C Holzer, 2006

6 Access to Mental Health Therapists ► Psychiatrist access not the only problem ► National shortage of skilled child therapists ► It’s why you’re all here—our therapist workforce needs both expansion in numbers, and training in current best practices New Freedom Commission, 2003

7 How Can Mental Health Become Part of the Child’s Medical Home? ► Provide PCPs with:  Mental health education  Rating scales/tools  Resource finding assistance ► When PCP wants to engage outside resources, it must be a real option  Rapid consultation for any difficult cases  Care collaboration with specialists

8 Telephone Based Consultations ► Get “just in time” processing  offer assistance only when provider wants it ► Teachable moments  “problem based learning” on provider’s own patient ► Reach a large audience with few resources  use our limited specialist resources more efficiently  In-person consults are less resource efficient ► Match intervention to the level of primary care provider engagement  call as often as they want  “raise all the boats”

9 Design of PAL ► “PAL” stands for “Partnership Access Line” ► Started April 2008  PCP develops any MH question about a child  PCP or assistant calls the PAL toll free number ► 1-866-599-PALS (7257)  PAL assistant answers, asks basic questions  Child psychiatrist on duty picks up line, or is paged ► “When in Doubt, Call Your PAL”

10 PAL: How It Works Continued ► PCP and child psychiatrist talk  if a FFS Medicaid client, PCP can get reimbursement  Diagnosis/therapy/medication recommendations ► If questions remain, a rapid patient consult appointment is offered (Medicaid/Healthy Options)  Patient can come to Seattle Children’s Hospital ► Or new office in Spokane for PAL program  When more convenient, a telemedicine appointment is offered ► Olympia or Longview

11 PAL Consult Appointments ► Consultant will not prescribe, or take on case themselves ► Referral to other specialists for ongoing care  MSW on our team now an expert on the regional referral process  provide bibliotherapy and other resource recommendations

12 Care Guide, Distributed to all PCP’s: www.palforkids.org

13 PAL Site Assignment

14 Calls Are Slowly Increasing

15 Continuing to Recruit New Users

16 Getting the Word Out ► Mailings ► Phone calls ► Office visits ► Conferences ► Word of Mouth ► Building professional relationships takes time

17 Types of PAL Calls ► Calls tend to be about difficult cases  86% had estimated GAF <60 ► Topics are all over the map  medications part of the question for 2/3 rd ► About 1 in 10 calls lead to in person consults

18 Age of PAL Call Subjects Age 6-12 Age 12+ Age 0-6

19 Medicaid Impact ► Despite the open invitation to call us, most calls are about Medicaid clients  37% of all the state’s children are enrolled in Medicaid  64% of calls to the PAL program have been about DSHS clients

20 Therapy ► ½ the time when a provider called to discuss a medication, the call ended with recommendation to start a new evidence based psychotherapy ► Now employ 2 social workers who assist providers with connecting to therapists

21 Satisfaction Measures ► PCP and family satisfaction very high  Average 4.8 on 5 point scale ► Collected testimonials have all been positive

22 Research ► Need quality research done on impact of PAL to justify its continued existence ► DSHS IRB approved study  Evaluation by EBPI

23 Take Home Points ► PAL is a primary care provider service ► Therapists might want to encourage PCP’s to utilize the PAL service ► PAL makes referral recommendations ► PAL makes referral recommendations  based on information provided to us by therapists  i.e. someone doing CBT gets a CBT referral  call Lauren or Jessica at 866-599-7257 to let them know your referral preferences

24 Contact PAL program 1-866-599-7257 www.palforkids.org

25 Collaborating with Psychiatrists ► HIPAA ► Exchange information


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