1. The Effectiveness of a Specialized Primary Care Medical Home for Patients with Serious Mental Illness.
- Author
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Chang, Evelyn, Cohen, Amy, Oberman, Rebecca, Chang, Dennis, Hamilton, Alison, Lindamer, Laurie, Sanford, Jesse, Whelan, Fiona, and Young, Alexander
- Subjects
Behavioral health ,Care coordination ,Disparities ,Health system ,hospital or practice redesign ,Patient centered medial home ,Screening ,Veteran care ,Glucose ,Humans ,Lipids ,Mental Disorders ,Patient-Centered Care ,Quality of Life - Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are unmet primary care needs among people with serious mental illness that might be improved with integrated care and medical care management. Many healthcare organizations have attempted to address this problem, but few interventions have been rigorously studied and found to be effective. OBJECTIVE: Study the implementation and effectiveness of a novel, specialized primary care medical home designed to improve the healthcare of patients with serious mental illness. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Clustered controlled trial for a median of 401 days. One Veterans Health Administration medical center was assigned to intervention and two were assigned to usual care (control). Thirty-nine clinicians and managers were included in the study, as well as 331 patients who met eligibility criteria. INTERVENTION: A specialized medical home with systematic patient engagement, proactive nurse panel management, a collaborative care psychiatrist, and a primary care physician providing care that included psychiatric treatment. MAIN MEASURES: Quality of care, chronic illness care and care experience, symptoms, and quality of life. KEY RESULTS: Sixty-five intervention patients (40%) moved all psychiatric care to the primary care team. No adverse events were attributable to the intervention. Compared with control, intervention patients had greater improvement over time in appropriate screening for body mass index, lipids, and glucose (χ2 = 6.9, 14.3, and 3.9; Ps
- Published
- 2022