| Literature DB >> 22104323 |
Brian J Kelly1, David A Perkins2, Jeffrey D Fuller3, Sharon M Parker3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While integrated primary healthcare for the management of depression has been well researched, appropriate models of primary care for people with severe and persistent psychotic disorders are poorly understood. In 2010 the NSW (Australia) Health Department commissioned a review of the evidence on "shared care" models of ambulatory mental health services. This focussed on critical factors in the implementation of these models in clinical practice, with a view to providing policy direction. The review excluded evidence about dementia, substance use and personality disorders.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22104323 PMCID: PMC3235059 DOI: 10.1186/1752-4458-5-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst ISSN: 1752-4458
Evidence for the benefits of shared care
| Benefit | Supporting evidence |
|---|---|
| • Improved access by reducing barriers to availability of integrated care with primary care or improved access to specialist care (Druss 2001, Harrison-Read 2002, PRISM-E, van Orden 2009). | |
| • Improved access to outpatient services, rehab services, and an increase the number of people receiving follow-up, case management and review of their medication (Byng 2004, Gilmer 2010, Rosenheck 2003) | |
| • Increased ability to target high priority groups through tailored programs linked with relevant services (e.g. cultural groups, age-based services, homelessness) (Asanow 2009, Gilmer 2010, Rosenheck 2003) | |
| • Reduced impact of perceived stigma on help seeking for mental health problems (PRISM-E, Gavin 2008) | |
| • Reduced unmet need for treatment (PRISM-E (73% of participants)) | |
| • Improved cultural appropriateness of service (IMPACT, PRISM-E) | |
| • Increased efficacy of pharmacological/psychological treatments in primary care. Treatment course is generally predictable and with good step up/step down algorithms (IMPACT, PROSPECT,CALM, Bower 2006, Gilbody 2006)) | |
| • Capacity to match intensity of intervention to patient need (stepped care) (IMPACT, PROSPECT, CALM) | |
| • Improved capacity of generalist services to meet full range of patient needs (IMPACT, PRISM-E) | |
| • Improved communication between levels of care (primary and specialist) (Craven 2006, PRISM-E) | |
| • Improved capacity to address mental health aspects of physical illness and chronic disease (Byng 2004, Druss 2001, Gilmer 2010, Rosenheck 2003, PRISM-E, IMPACT) | |
| • Improved skill of generalist health worker in mental health care (Fuller 2009) | |
| • Considers client preference in the choice of care delivered (IMPACT, CALM) | |
| • Promotes engagement in care (e.g. via link worker) (Byng 2004, Oxman 2003) | |
| • Single point of contact to review care progress and needs (e.g. through primary care) (Druss 2001, PRISM-E) | |
| • Evidence of improved clinical outcomes (psychiatric) (Bauer 2006, Bertelsen 2008, Bower 2006, Fuller 2009, Gilbody 2006, Simon 2006, PRISM-E (6 mths only), IMPACT, PROSPECT, RESPECT-D, CALM) | |
| • Evidence of improved clinical outcomes (physical and medical) (Druss 2001, IMPACT) | |
| • Evidence of reduced hospitalisation for mental health problem (Bauer 2009) | |
| • Evidence of improved social functioning and/or quality of life (Bauer 2009, Gilmer 2010, Rosenheck 2003, IMPACT) | |
| • Greater satisfaction with care (Asarnow 2009 (6 months), Bauer 2009, Gilmer 2010, Rosenheck 2003, PRISM-E, IMPACT, RESPECT-D) | |
| • Increased ability of consumers to manage their own care (IMPACT) | |
| • Reduced or equal client costs (Bauer 2006, Bower 2006, Druss 2001, Katon 2002, van Orden 2009) | |
| • Increased health care costs of initial set-up (first 12 months) balanced against cost savings in following year (Katon 2002, Katon 2006, Simon 2007) | |
| • Reduced in-patient costs (Bauer 2009, Byng 2004, Druss 2001) | |
| • Cost-offset effects on non-mental health-related ambulatory care services (IMPACT) | |
| • Reduction in costs to other systems (e.g. justice) (Gilmer 2010, Rosenheck 2003) |
1 Costs generally have been assessed during the intervention period only - up to 2 years follow up in large depression trials
The core components of effective shared care models for depression and anxiety
| PRISM-E | MPACT I | PROSPECT | RESPECT-D | CALM | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Process of care | Integrated mental health service | Care manager (nurses or psychologists trained for the study | Care manager (depression care manager) | Care manager (background in PC or MH nursing) | Flexible treatment delivery model (preferred treatment) Anxiety Care Specialist (ACS) to deliver web based CBT program |
| Screening | yes | yes | yes | no | yes |
| Treatment algorithm | no | yes | yes | no | yes |
| Formal stepped care | no | yes | yes | no | yes |
| Care management location | na | on-site | on-site | off-site (centrally located) | on-site |
| Patient education/self management | variable | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Case management | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Care management to patient contact | na | face-to-face; telephone | face-to-face | telephone | face-to-face |
| Psychiatric supervision | na | face-to-face; telephone | face-to-face | telephone | telephone/email |
| Care management counselling | na | PST-PC | IPT | supportive | supportive |
| Psychological supervision | na | telephone | face-to-face | na | unclear |
| MH specialty treatment location | on-site | on-site | on-site | off-site | on-site |
| Geriatrician supervision | no | Liaison/PC provider | no | no | no |
| Standardised follow up | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Standardised outcome measure | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
Source: Oxman -The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry 2003; 11, 5- (Table 2, Page 509)
Butler - AHRQ Publication No. 09-E003. Rockville, MD. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. 2008 (Table 4, Page 46)
Roy-Byrne - Delivery of Evidence-Based Treatment for Multiple Anxiety Disorders in Primary Care. A Randomized Controlled Trial JAMA 2010;303,19.
The core components of shared care models for severe and persistent mental disorders
| COPERATIVE STUDIES PROGRAM 430 Bauer 2009 | Simon 2006 | OPUS Bertelson 2008 | MENTAL HEALTH LINK Byng 2004 | Druss 2001 | Gilmer 2010 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Process of care | Specialty mental health team (.5 fulltime-equivalent (FTE) nurse and a .25 FTE psychiatrist) | Nurse care managers with at least 5 years of clinical psychiatric experience | Assertive Community Treatment, family treatment and social skills training | Facilitation based QI programme designed to improve communication between general practice and community mental health and improve systems of care within general practice (including roles of link worker and psychiatrist) | Integrated primary care and mental health clinic | Full service partnerships and subsidised housing and full fidelity Assertive Community Treatment by team- based services with a focus on rehabilitation and recovery |
| Condition | Bipolar disorder and associated co-morbidities including: substance use disorders, anxiety disorders, any current psychiatric co-morbidity and active medical co-morbidity requiring treatment | Bipolar spectrum disorder diagnosed during previous 12 months (bipolar disorder type I or type II, schizoaffective disorder, or cyclothymia). | 1st episode psychosis | Long term mental illness - chronic psychosis, and disabling neuroses | SMI & homeless; co-morbid drug and alcohol abuse. | SMI (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or major depression) |
| Length of follow up | 3 years | 2 years | 2 and 5 years | 1 year | 1 year | 2 years |
| Screening | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | unclear |
| Additional training for staff | yes | yes | yes - staffed trained to deliver early intervention program | yes - training of research facilitators | no | no |
| Treatment algorithm | yes - used to promote identification and treatment by outlining medications to use without sequencing individual agents | yes | no | no | no | unclear |
| Formal stepped care | no | yes | no - team assessed as to when patients were ready for a specific treatment modality | no | no | unclear |
| Enhanced communication between health providers | no | yes- contact tracking, structured assessment, and standardised feedback reports to providers | unclear | yes - formal communication guidelines around referral, discharge and professional roles and patient management | yes - e-mail, telephone, and face-to-face discussion | unclear |
| Care management location | outpatient clinic | behavioural health clinics | primary care office or in patient's home or other places in the community | general practice | primary care clinic and mental health clinic adjoining | community |
| Patient education/self management | yes | yes | yes - focus on problem solving and development of skills to cope with illness | no | yes | no |
| Case management | yes | yes | yes- team based | yes | yes | yes |
| Specialist supervision | yes | yes - weekly | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Care coordination | yes - scheduling appointments and follow-up for missed appointments, and with mental health and medical-surgical providers | yes | yes - across team and social services and other involved institutions | yes | yes - scheduling appointments and follow-up of missed appointments between the two clinics | unclear |
| Follow up provided to patient | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Crisis support | yes | yes | yes - crisis plan developed with each patient. Patients given out of hours contact number for response the following day | unclear | unclear | yes - 24/7 |
| Standardised outcome measure | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
The core components of shared care models for severe and/or persistent mental disorders (contd)
| Harrison-Read 2002 | Lester 2003 | ACCESS Rosenheck 2002 | Rosenheck 2003 | van Orden 2009 | Warner 2000 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Process of care | Enhanced Community Management/Assertive Community Treatment | Patient-held record | Integration of service systems with outreach and case management | Housing + Intensive Case Management | Collaborative care involving access to a mental health worker in primary care | Shared care record |
| Condition | "Heavy users" of psychiatric services | Schizophrenia | SMI and associated co-morbidities + homelessness | Psychiatric and/or substance abuse disorders | Mental disorder (not described) | Long term mental illness- psychosis, personality disorder or other condition requiring long term supervision |
| Length of follow-up | 2 years | 1 year | 5 years | 1 year | 1 year | 1 year |
| Screening | no | no | yes | unclear | yes | Patients selected at hospital discharge |
| Additional training for staff | unclear | yes - in use of the record | yes - inter-agency | yes - with written materials | no | |
| Treatment algorithm | unclear | no | unclear | no | no | |
| Formal stepped care | unclear | no | unclear | no | no | |
| Enhanced communication between health providers | yes | yes - shared care record and flagging of patient records in both general practice and specialist settings | yes | yes - inter-agency agreement | yes | yes - shared care record linked to other communication processes |
| Care management location | community | general practice and community | community | community | general practice/primary care | general practice and community |
| Patient education/self management | unclear | no | unclear | no | yes - CBT | no -instruction on use of the booklet only |
| Case management | yes | unclear | yes | yes | ? | unclear |
| Specialist supervision | yes | unclear | yes | unclear | yes | unclear |
| Care coordination | yes | unclear | yes | yes | no - referral only | unclear |
| Follow up provided to patient | unclear | unclear | yes | unclear | unclear | unclear |
| Crisis support | no | unclear | unclear | yes | unclear | unclear |
| Standardised outcome measure | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |