GA-U Mental Health Pilot Integrating primary care and mental health Jurgen Unutzer, MD, MPH, MA Professor & Vice Chair Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Improving Depression Treatment in Primary Care: Dissemination and Implementation Edmund Chaney, PhD Department of Veterans Affairs, Seattle AcademyHealth.
Advertisements

TRI science addiction Lost Opportunity? SBI for Substance Abuse In ERs and Trauma Centers Academy Health Mady Chalk, Ph.D. Treatment Research Institute.
Best Practices in Integration: Where the Rubber Meets the Road Kathleen Reynolds, LMSW, ACSW
Mental Health is Integral to Overall Health. Health Issues Related to People with Serious Mental Illness People with SMI who receive services in the public.
PRIMARY AND BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE INTEGRATION SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 The Governor’s Health Summit.
Incorporating Behavioral Health in the EHR to Improve Care Insitute of Medicine | November 25, 2013 Brigid McCaw, MD, MS, MPH, FACP Medical Director, Family.
Primary Care-Mental Health Integration in the Department of Veterans Affairs Andrew Pomerantz, MD National Mental Health Director for Integrated Services,
AtlantiCare Health Services Mission Health Care Region II Conference Integration of Behavioral Health in Primary Care June 2, 2010 Region II Conference.
VA Primary Care-Mental Health Integration (PC-MHI)
Arthur E. Kelley, MD Medical Director, Partnership for Community Care (CCNC) Psychiatric Consultant, Cornerstone Healthcare, High Point, NC.
Telemedicine-Based Collaborative Care Models John Fortney, PhD Jeff Pyne, PhD VA HSR&D Center for Mental Healthcare and Outcomes Research VISN 16 Mental.
Behavioral Health Services for Injured or Ill workers – Collaborative Care Analysis and Recommendations January 22, 2015.
CCC Team Assessment of Care Coordination Capacity February 26, 2014 Care Coordination Collaborative California Institute for Mental Health Care Coordination.
BRIGHT Behavioral health Resources Integrated with Good Health care Techniques Prestera Center for Mental Health Services, Inc. Valley Health Systems,
Tackling Challenges to the Integrated Health Workforce Kathleen Reynolds.
Primary Care Psychology Lisa K. Kearney, Ph.D. Primary Care Psychologist South Texas Veterans Health Care System.
Safety Net Medical Home Initiative The Commonwealth Fund Webinar December 10, 2014 Integrating Behavioral Health into Primary Care.
UW H EALTH P RIMARY C ARE / B EHAVIORAL H EALTH I NTEGRATION U NITED W AY F ORUM September 22,
Missouri’s Primary Care and CMHC Health Home Initiative
The ACA and Medicaid Health Homes Chuck Ingoglia National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare.
Overview Community Care of North Carolina. Our Vision and Key Principles  Develop a better healthcare system for NC starting with public payers  Strong.
Integrated Care in Practice Laura Galbreath, MPP Director, Center for Integrated Health Solutions May 15, 2013.
The Business Case for Bidirectional Integrated Care: Mental Health and Substance Use Services in Primary Care Settings and Primary Care Services in Specialty.
Health Care for the Homeless Training Hawaii Primary Care Association June 27, 2013 Brenda Goldstein, MPH
Janice Berry Edwards, PhD, LICSW, LCSW-C, BCD, ACSW
TREATING THE WHOLE PERSON WHILE REDUCING COSTS: Practical Lessons from the California Integrated Behavioral Health Project Mary Rainwater, L.C.S.W. Project.
Non-communicable Diseases: Integrated Care & Health Policy Eliot Sorel, M.D. Senior Scholar, Clinical Practice Innovations Professor, Global Health, Health.
Working with the County of San Diego to Provide Mental Health Services Family Health Centers of San Diego October 31, 2007.
June 11, IOM, Reducing Suicide, 2002 Statement of Task w Assess the science base w Evaluate the status of prevention w Consider strategies for studying.
Mental Health Initiatives For Unfunded People Delia Rochon Community Benefit – Mental Health November 2008.
Integrating Mental Health, Physical Health and Substance Use for low income Medi- Cal and Uninsured Populations in California ITUP Conference – Panel Discussion.
1 Access to Best Practices for Co-Occurring Disorders: Research and Practice Partnerships Constance Weisner, DrPH, MSW Stacy Sterling, MSW, MPH Sujaya.
Mental Health, Mental Illness and Chronic Disease Policy CMHA National Conference August 2008 Barbara Neuwelt, CMHA, Ontario.
Applying Science to Transform Lives TREATMENT RESEARCH INSTITUTE TRI science addiction Mady Chalk, Ph.D Treatment Research Institute CADPAAC Conference.
Enhancing the Medical Home for Children with Special Health Care Needs: A Quantitative Approach The Quality Colloquium August 20, 2008 Angelo P. Giardino,
{ Managing the Impact of Mental Health Issues on a Healthcare System David W. Greaves, Ph.D. VA Portland Healthcare System.
11 Managed Care and Integration May 19, Managed Care and Integration How One Organization Is Approaching This Dynamic Change To Current Practices.
“The Effect of Patient Complexity on Treatment Outcomes for Patients Enrolled in an Integrated Depression Treatment Program- a Pilot Study” Ryan Miller,
Mental Health Insurance Parity: A View from the States David L. Shern, Ph.D. President/CEO Mental Health America Academy Health Policy Conference February.
Integration in the Field: County Initiatives UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs.
Addressing Depression in “Medicare Health Support” Michael Schoenbaum June 27, 2005.
Managing Care While Staying in the Moment October 8, 2015.
Click to edit Master subtitle style Aetna Behavioral Health Depression Initiatives June 2006.
Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care
Integrated Behavioral Health Planning Meeting October 25, 2013 Debra Hurwitz, MBA, BSN, RN CSI Co-Director 1.
Specialised Geriatric Services Heather Gilley Sharon Straus.
SUSAN C DAY, MD, MPH Director of Quality and Practice Improvement Division of General Internal Medicine University of Pennsylvania CFHA Presentation: Integrating.
Depression Care Management Lessons from Project IMPACT _____________________________________________________ Jürgen Unützer, MD, MPH Professor and Vice.
Mental Health and Primary Care Integration current M.H.S.A. Expansion 2006 County of San Mateo Mental Health.
Outpatient Behavioral Health Summit Pennsylvania Community Providers Association December 2009 Dale Jarvis, CPA Bea Dixon, PhD MCPP Healthcare Consulting.
IMPACT Team Care For Depression VA Puget Sound V-tel conference February 23, 2009.
Behavioral Health Integration
Integrating Primary and Behavioral Care: A Basic Primer Rick Hankey LifeStream Behavioral Center Leesburg, Florida.
Integrating Behavioral Health and Physical Health David Conn, Ph.D. Senior Vice President Mental Health Systems, Inc.
Serving Older Adults with Behavioral Health Needs January 11, Oregon Health Authority, Health Systems Division and Portland State University Institute.
Overview of KP Behavioral Health Delivery System Dr. Stuart Buttlaire Regional Director of Inpatient Psychiatry and Continuing Care Regional Chair, Integrated.
General Assistance – Unemployable Experience in WA state July 2010.
Behavioral Health INTEGRATION Recent literature, conceptual frameworks & options for next steps October 16, 2013 Mark Gibson Director Center for Evidence-based.
SOONERCARE Health Homes A Strategy to build a system of care to improve health, enhance access and quality and control costs for members with SMI or SED.
Use of Mentored Residency Teams to Enhance Addiction Medicine Education Maureen Strohm, MD, Ken Saffier, MD, Julie Nyquist, PhD, Steve Eickelberg, MD MERF.
2 PBM+ An Integrated Model for Behavioral Health Care Kiran Taylor, MD Chief, Division of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine Spectrum Health Medical Group.
MCPP HEALTHCARE CONSULTING National Overview: Behavioral Health Primary Care Integration and the Person- Centered Healthcare Home California Primary Care.
Where & How Behavioral Health can be Integrated into the Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) *Originally adapted from PCPCC’s Behavioral Health Task Force.
Objectives of behavioral health integration in the Family Care Center
Moving the Needle: Toward Value-Based Integrated Mental Health Services for Patients with Chronic Medical Conditions James G Baker MD MBA Associate Chair,
Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
Information for Network Providers
Primary Care Milestone 15
Integrating Behavioral Health and Physical Health
2008 Behavioral Health Symposium
Presentation transcript:

GA-U Mental Health Pilot Integrating primary care and mental health Jurgen Unutzer, MD, MPH, MA Professor & Vice Chair Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences University of Washington

The Case for Integration  Mental disorders are common, disabling, and expensive  Primary care is the ‘de facto’ health care system for common mental disorders but only % of patients get effective treatment.  Patients with severe mental illness (SMI) receive poor medical care and have high rates of mortality

Morbidity and Mortality in People with Serious Mental Illness Persons with serious mental illness (SMI) are dying 25 years earlier than the general population Suicide and injury account for about 30-40% of excess mortality, but 60% of premature deaths in persons with schizophrenia are due to medical conditions such as cardiovascular, pulmonary and infectious diseases –Need for improved care of chronic medical disorders in specialty mental health care settings

Why treat mental disorders in primary care ?  Limited access to / use of mental health specialists  Treat mental health disorders where the patients are - Established provider-patient relationship - Less stigma in primary care - Better coordination with medical care

Integrated care = working effectively ‘across silos’ Primary Care Community Mental Health Center PC CM HC Social services? Alcohol & substance abuse care?

20 years of collaborative care research at UW  Depression in Primary Care  Depression in Diabetes (Pathways)  Late-life Depression (IMPACT)  Depression in Adolescents - in Primary Care - in Schools  Telemedicine Consultation in Child Psychiatry  Anxiety Disorders in Primary Care  PTSD & Substance abuse in Trauma Care

Moving towards integrated Care Worst case scenario = compete Usual situation = co-exist Helpful but not sufficient = consult (or) co-locate Ideal = collaborate effectively

Evidence for integrated care: depression Meta-analysis by Gilbody et al, Archives of Internal Medicine; trials of collaborative care for depression in primary care (US and Europe) –CC is consistently more effective than usual care –Successful programs include active care management (not case management) support of medication management in primary care psychiatric consultation

1,801 primary care patients with depression and comorbid medical disorders Funded by John A. Hartford Foundation California Healthcare Foundation Example: IMPACT Jürgen Unützer, MD

Effective Collaboration Prepared, Pro-active Practice Team Informed, Activated Patient IMPACT Team Care Model Practice Support

Integrated care DOUBLES the effectiveness of usual care for depression % patients Participating Organizations 50 % or greater improvement in depression at 12 months Unutzer et al., JAMA 2002; Psychiatr Clin N America 2005

Integrated Care Benefits Ethnic Minority Populations Areán et al. Medical Care, % or greater improvement in depression at 12 months

Improved Physical Functioning SF-12 Physical Function Component Summary Score (PCS-12) P<0.01 P=0.35 Callahan et al. JAGS. 2005; 53:

Lower long-term (4 year) healthcare costs

Other lessons from IMPACT 1)Co-location is NOT sufficient. 2) Initial treatments are rarely sufficient. Several changes in treatment are often necessary (stepped care). To accomplish this, we need - Systematic outcomes tracking (e.g., PHQ-9) to know when change in treatment is needed. - Active care management until patient is improved to facilitate changes in medication, behavioral activation. - Consultation with mental health specialist if patients not improving as expected.

DIAMOND Initiative in Minnesota  Integrated care management for depression supported by 8 large commercial payors and the state Medicaid plan in Minnesota - Organized by the Institute of Clinical Systems Improvement (ICSI) - Common payment code for integrated care / care management  State-wide implementation - First group of 14 clinics trained in March Goal to have evidence-based depression care management available in ~ 90 primary care clinics state-wide, reaching ~ 1.4 million Minnesotans by 2010

Evidence for integrated care: anxiety, alcohol/substance abuse Anxiety disorders: - Roy-Byrne, et al: Integrated care for anxiety disorders - Zatzick, et al: Trauma-center-based care for alcohol / substance abuse problems and PTSD Alcohol / substance abuse: SBIRT (Substance use Brief Intervention Referral and Treatment)

GA-U Mental Health Pilot Community Health Plan of Washington GA-U Mental Health Pilot Steering Committee UW Department of Psychiatry

Steering Committee Graydon Andrus Marc Avery Amandalei Bennett Esther Bennett Jane Beyer Teri Card Abie Castillo Mervyn Chambers Ann Christian Frances Collison Mark Dalton David DiGiuseppe David Dula Stephanie Earhart Trudi Fajans Sharon Farmer David Flentge Harvey Funai Mark Johnson Rebecca Kavoussi Earl Long Barbara Mauer Linda McVeigh Evan Oakes Virginia Ochoa Ed O’Connor Amnon Schoenfeld Anne Shields Rose Soohoo Karen Spoelman Doug Stevenson Tom Trompeter Jurgen Unutzer Richard Veith Steve Vervalin Grace Wang

GA-U Program State-only funded program that provides: - cash grants (up to $339/mo) - limited medical care - no mental health care For adults who are: - physically or mentally disabled - unemployable for more than 90 days

Co-occurring diagnoses DSHS | GA-U Clients: Challenges and Opportunities August 2006

Most common Dx and Rx DSHS | GA-U Clients: Challenges and Opportunities August 2006

GA-U Mental Health Pilot Based on experiences with managed medical care pilot: - difficulty managing medical care without addressing mental health issues

GA-U Mental Health Pilot Overview 2 year demonstration pilot –Pierce & King counties –Partnership between CHP, Community Health Centers, Community Mental Health Centers, and UW Department of Psychiatry Goals of Mental Health Pilot –Build on success of GA-U medical pilot Structure of Mental Health Pilot –Level I: MH Treatment in Primary Care –Level II: Community Mental Health Care for severely mentally ill –Goal: Improved access, coordination of care & outcomes

Goal: Integrated care GA-U Client Level II Care Care Coordinator Consulting Psychiatrists CSO CD Treatment Level I Care (~ 1,500) PCP DVR Other clinic- based mental health providers* * Available in some clinics

Goals Integrated physical health, mental health and substance abuse services to GA-U clients where they seek care Goals: - improve patient outcomes - reduce costs

Level 1 mental health care Clients with behavioral health needs are treated by primary care providers with: - support from care coordinators and other practice-based mental health staff (if available) - support from consulting psychiatrist

Psychiatric Consultation in Level 1 Ongoing case consultation with care managers re: Level 1 mental health treatment - scheduled and ad hoc consultation to care managers and PCPs - systematic, based on clinical needs and outcomes - In-person evaluation, if needed

Participating Health Systems Community Health Care (Pierce) Community Health Centers of King County Country Doctor Clinic (King) Puget Sound Neighborhood Health Centers (King) Harborview Medical Center (King) International Community Health System (King) SeaMar (Pierce, King)

Intensive mental health services (Level 2) Community Mental Health services CMHC case manager coordinates with Level-1 Care Coordinator to insure continuity of care

Participating CMHCs Greater Lakes (Pierce) Community Psychiatric Clinic (King) Downtown Emergency Service Center (King) Harborview Mental Health (King) Highline-West Seattle (King) SeaMar (Pierce, King) Sound Mental Health Therapeutic Health Services (King) Valley Cities (King)

Integrated care GA-U Client Level II Care Care Coordinator Consulting Psychiatrists CSO CD Treatment Level I Care (~ 1,500) PCP DVR Other clinic- based mental health providers* * Available in some clinics

Mental Health Integrated Tracking system (MHITS):  Helps CHP, CHCs, CMHCs, and care coordinators keep track of and care for client population  Facilitates communication between providers (e.g., CHC and CMHC), referrals, and mental health consultation

How does MHITS help? Keeps track of all GA-U Mental Health clients Up to date client contact information to facilitate contact and follow-up Who is being treated in level 1 and 2? Who has been referred for services (e.g., CD, CSO, DVR, level 2 care) and who is getting services? Tells you quickly who needs additional attention Who is improving or not improving? Reminders for clinicians & managers Customized caseload reports

How does MHITS help? (cont.) Facilitates mental health specialty consultation Facilitates communication between treating providers Supports care and care coordination across settings of care (e.g., level 1 and 2) Provides updates on program developments, clinical tools, etc. Facilitates management decisions

Integrated mental health care: a vision  WA could be the 1 st state with a truly integrated MH care system  Improved access and capacity in primary care  Less stigma  Better medical care for patients with SMI  Improved communication between mental health, primary care,  Information systems to facilitate cost- effective care across systems.  Improved population health