Literature DB >> 35880768

Payment strategies for behavioral health integration in hospital-affiliated and non-hospital-affiliated primary care practices.

Kris Pui Kwan Ma1, Brenda L Mollis1, Jennifer Rolfes2, Margaret Au1, Abigail Crocker3, Sarah H Scholle4, Rodger Kessler5, Laura-Mae Baldwin1, Kari A Stephens1.   

Abstract

Recent value-based payment reforms in the U.S. called for empirical data on how primary care practices of varying characteristics fund their integrated behavioral health services. To describe payment strategies used by U.S. primary care practices to fund behavioral health integration and compare strategies between practices with and without hospital affiliation.Baseline data were used and collected from 44 practices participating in a cluster-randomized, pragmatic trial of behavioral health integration. Data included practice characteristics and payment strategies-fee-for-service payment, pay-for-performance incentives, grants, and graduate medical education funds. Descriptive and comparative analyses using Fisher's exact tests and independent T-tests were conducted. The sample had 26 (59.1%) hospital-affiliated (hospital/health system-owned, academic medical centers and hospital-affiliated practices) and 18 (40.9%) non-hospital-affiliated practices (community health centers/federally qualified health centers and privately-owned practices). Most practices (88.6%) received payments through fee-for-service; 63.6% received pay-for-performance incentives; 31.8% received grant funds. Collaborative Care Management billing (CPT) codes were used in six (13.6%) practices. Over half (53.8%) of hospital-affiliated practices funded their behavioral health services through fee-for-service and pay-for-performance incentives only, as opposed to two-thirds (66.7%) of non-hospital-affiliated practices required additional support from grants and/or general medical education funds. Primary care practices support behavioral health integration through diverse payment strategies. More hospital-affiliated practices compared to non-hospital-affiliated practices funded integrated behavioral health services through fee-for-service and pay-for-performance incentives. Practices without hospital affiliation relied on multiple funding streams including grants and/or general medical education funds, suggesting their approach to financial sustainment may be more precarious or challenging, compared to hospital-affiliated practices. © Society of Behavioral Medicine 2022. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Behavioral health; Integrated care; Payment models; Primary care; Value-based care

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35880768      PMCID: PMC9385119          DOI: 10.1093/tbm/ibac053

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transl Behav Med        ISSN: 1613-9860            Impact factor:   3.626


  17 in total

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2.  Pay for performance in behavioral health.

Authors:  Robert W Bremer; Sarah Hudson Scholle; Donna Keyser; Jeanine V Knox Houtsinger; Harold Alan Pincus
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4.  Medicare Payment for Behavioral Health Integration.

Authors:  Matthew J Press; Ryan Howe; Michael Schoenbaum; Sean Cavanaugh; Ann Marshall; Lindsey Baldwin; Patrick H Conway
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5.  Development and validation of a measure of primary care behavioral health integration.

Authors:  Rodger S Kessler; Andrea Auxier; Juvena R Hitt; C R Macchi; Daniel Mullin; Constance van Eeghen; Benjamin Littenberg
Journal:  Fam Syst Health       Date:  2016-10-13       Impact factor: 1.950

6.  Integrated Behavioral and Primary Care: What Is the Real Cost?

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8.  Implementation of Behavioral Health Integration in Small Primary Care Settings: Lessons Learned and Future Directions.

Authors:  Matthew L Goldman; Ekaterina Smali; Talia Richkin; Harold Alan Pincus; Henry Chung
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  2021-02-27

9.  Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care (IBH-PC) to improve patient-centered outcomes in adults with multiple chronic medical and behavioral health conditions: study protocol for a pragmatic cluster-randomized control trial.

Authors:  Abigail M Crocker; Rodger Kessler; Constance van Eeghen; Levi N Bonnell; Ryan E Breshears; Peter Callas; Jessica Clifton; William Elder; Chet Fox; Sylvie Frisbie; Juvena Hitt; Jennifer Jewiss; Roger Kathol; Kelly Clark/Keefe; Jennifer O'Rourke-Lavoie; George S Leibowitz; C R Macchi; Mark McGovern; Brenda Mollis; Daniel J Mullin; Zsolt Nagykaldi; Lisa Watts Natkin; Wilson Pace; Richard G Pinckney; Douglas Pomeroy; Alexander Pond; Rachel Postupack; Paula Reynolds; Gail L Rose; Sarah Hudson Scholle; William J Sieber; Terry Stancin; Kurt C Stange; Kari A Stephens; Kathryn Teng; Elizabeth Needham Waddell; Benjamin Littenberg
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2021-03-10       Impact factor: 2.279

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