| Literature DB >> 21208413 |
Feico Zwerver1, Antonius J M Schellart, Johannes R Anema, Kathelijne C Rammeloo, Allard J van der Beek.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This article describes the development of a strategy to implement the insurance medicine guidelines for depression. Use of the guidelines is intended to result in more transparent and uniform assessment of claimants with depressive symptoms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21208413 PMCID: PMC3022701 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Insurance physicians in the Netherlands; source: R. Steenbeek [4].
Figure 2Intervention Mapping Process, developed by Bartholomew et al [15]. Note: The term "insurance physician" was added to the original plan.
Figure 3Needs assessment.
Figure 4The ASE model, as defined by De Vries [24].
The needs of the insurance physicians with regard to guidelines for depression
| Diagnostics | A list of the DSM IV criteria for depression and the DSM IV criteria for the most relevant differential diagnostic psychiatric disorders |
|---|---|
| Psychiatric examination | A list of psychiatric examination items on a desk mat |
| Seriousness depression | A method with which to determine the seriousness of depression in a uniform way. The Hamilton Rating Scale of Depression? (HRSD) |
| Seriousness and disability | Expert opinion to clarify the relationship between the seriousness of the disorder and the assessed disability |
| Prognosis | Need for evidence-based information about periods of recovery from depression in relation to treatment and co-morbidity |
| Guidelines for depression and other standards | Expert opinion on the relationship between the guidelines for depression and the standards: "Full disability entitlement on medical grounds" and "reduction in working hours" for partly disabled claimants |
| Coping styles | Information about personal characteristics and coping styles and how to distinguish between disease and behaviour |
Implementation strategy: insurance physicians' wishes regarding educational training and support in the use of the guidelines
| Training module | Form, implementation | Method |
|---|---|---|
| Introduction to the guidelines for depression | Experts from the curative sector and insurance physicians with knowledge of depression | Presentation of problems from curative and insurance-medical viewpoints; mutual questioning regarding experience and vision |
| Materials, tools | Summary card listing all diagnostic criteria | Practise in the use of the materials, and case histories |
| Case-histories | Group discussion and practise in applying the guidelines | What constitutes a good assessment? What is unclear? Why? |
| Work ability assessment | Insurance physician and psychiatrist/psychologist-researcher | Scientific insights, experiences, focus on problems (LFA) |
| Information on treatment possibilities | Experts from the curative sector | Current thinking on appropriate treatment. What questions can the insurance physician put to the curative physician? |
| Carrying out and interpreting psychiatric tests | Psychologist, psychiatrist | Different presentation in ethnic minorities (a high proportion of the claimants) |
| Detailed explanation and interpretation of the HRSD questionnaire | Psychologist, psychiatrist | Practise in the use of the questionnaire |
| Feedback | Insurance physician and guidelines author/researcher | Feedback from the profession; opportunity to ask questions |
LFA = List of Functional Abilities; HRSD = Hamilton Rating Scale of Depression
Program objectives, learning objectives and change objectives
| Program objectives for insurance physician | Learning objectives for insurance physician (IP)'s personal determinants | Change objectives for environmental determinants | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge and skills | Attitude | Self-efficacy | Expectations | Availability and uniformity | Support | |
| IP makes thorough investigation and records findings transparently in the report. | IP has sufficient knowledge and skills to understand the guidelines and to implement it in practice. | IP accepts the guideline as a practical resource and a useful source of information. | IP considers him/herself capable of applying the guidelines in practice. | IP believes that use of the guidelines can make his/her examinations more thorough and transparent. | IP is trained to use the guideline and has the opportunity to practise using it during the training and subsequently in practice. | IP's quality-oriented activities are supported by National Institute for Employee Benefits Schemes by putting the emphasis on quality instead of productivity. |
| To do so, IP uses the guidelines in order to ensure quality and uniformity of the assessment. | IP has the skills to perform the examination in line with applicable requirements. | IP supports the profession's general objective of fair assessment based on thoroughness, quality and uniformity. | IP consider him/herself capable of investigating issues associated with the assessment and obtaining guidance from the guideline, literature or colleagues | IP believes that the quality and uniformity of his/her work ability assessments will be enhanced by the information in the guidelines. | Case histories are discussed amongst colleagues by reference to the guideline, enabling IP's to ask questions and learn from one another. | Staff of the Institute support IP in use of the guidelines and related activities. |
| IP uses evidence-based information to support work ability assessment | IP has sufficient evidence-based knowledge to recognize and address any lack of skills. | IP sees the guideline as a means to realizing the objective. | IP believes that the information in the guidelines will help him/her make more evidence-based work ability assessments. | Staff physicians provide all IP's with performance feedback and work with IP's to define individual learning programmes so that all attain a similar level. | Netherlands Association of Insurance Medicine supports IP's quality-oriented activities and encourages use of the guidelines. | |
IP = insurance physician
Determinants of learning and change objectives and the associated strategies
| Determinant | Learning objectives for the insurance physician | Theory-based method | Practical strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge | Familiarity with the content of the guideline | Dissemination of training material | Making guideline available in combination with practical instruments |
| Skills | The ability to apply knowledge in practice | Interactive group training | Interactive training in use of the guidelines |
| Attitude | Willingness to accept the guidelines and use them to improve quality | Persuasion by opinion leaders | Benefits highlighted during training and by staff and the Netherlands Association for Insurance Medicine |
| Self-efficacy | Belief in ability to use the guidelines in practice and finding answers to questions | Performance-related feedback | Positive individualised feedback during training and subsequently in practice, assistance with questions |
| Expectations | Expectation that the guideline will contribute to more evidence-based assessments | Individualized feedback and group performance audit data | Training in use of the guidelines with exercise case-histories, feedback at group and individual level |
| Availability | The ability to practise, ask questions and work on personal performance | Feedback, personal improvement, planning | Practice in training, feedback on performance, support with questions |
| Uniformity | All insurance physicians covered by similar requirements | Quality-monitoring and quality-management | Staff physician appraises all insurance physicians using the same indicators |
| Support | Support from colleagues, staff, management and professional association, facilitation and, where necessary, amendment of the work process | In-built process reminders, quality management, support from opinion leaders | Quality evaluation by management, staff quality-oriented direction, promotion by the Netherlands Association for Insurance Medicine |
Content of the toolbox
| Desk mat | Diagnosis and differential diagnosis based on the DSM-IV |
|---|---|
| Checklist | Items referring to the main points of the guidelines for depression |
| HRSD [ | Assessing the severity of depression |
HRSD = Hamilton Rating Scale of Depression
Figure 5Program plan.
Positive and negative features of the program implementation for various parties concerned
| Parties involved | Positive features of program implementation | Negative features |
|---|---|---|
| Management of Socio-Medical Department | More public support | (Initial) loss of production |
| (Regional) managers | Increased quality | Loss of production, possibly temporary |
| (Regional) staff physicians | Better-quality assessments | Guidelines must not be rigid |
| Insurance physicians | Useful guidelines and EBM information | Learning a new approach takes time; integration in personal routine is an effort |
| Claimants | More thorough and uniform claim assessment | Longer, more structured consultations (not necessarily a drawback) |
| Experts | Influence on content | Time input |
Figure 6Research model, schematically represented on the basis of the ASE model. IP = Insurance Physician