28 results on '"Straus JH"'
Search Results
2. Depressive symptom screening and endorsement of psychosis risk-related experiences in a diverse adolescent and young adult outpatient clinic in the US.
- Author
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Johnson KA, Shrier LA, Eiduson R, Parsa N, Lilly M, D'Angelo E, Straus JH, and Woodberry KA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Young Adult, Humans, Adult, Hallucinations, Surveys and Questionnaires, Ambulatory Care Facilities, Depression diagnosis, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis, Psychotic Disorders therapy, Psychotic Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Background: Early identification and intervention is a gold standard for psychotic disorders, for which delays in care can have serious consequences. Screening for psychosis in primary care may circumvent barriers related to stigma and facilitate shorter pathways to care. Yet, there is debate regarding the benefit-risk balance for psychosis screening in general adolescent populations., Methods: Primary care patients of an adolescent/young adult medical clinic in the US ages 14-21 self-administered surveys assessing age, sex, receipt of psychotherapy, and occurrence, frequency (1-5), and distress (0-3) for 23 psychosis risk (PR) symptoms, including 6 general/nonspecific items and 17 psychosis-specific items. Participants also completed the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9); scores of ≥10 suggested clinically significant depressive symptoms. Analyses characterized PR symptoms and examined associations of PR symptom distress with current therapy and depressive symptom severity., Results: Of 212 patients who completed the survey, 75% endorsed ≥1 PR symptom and 27% rated ≥3 on distress for psychosis-specific items. Those with high PHQ-9 scores reported higher PR distress overall (t = -6.1, df = 52.3, p < 0.001) but not on psychosis-specific items such as hallucinations and suspiciousness. One in 9 participants reported heightened PR distress without being in therapy or having high depressive symptoms., Conclusions: Most adolescents in this primary care sample endorsed symptoms associated with PR. Distress related to these symptoms was less common but occurred even in the absence of depressive symptoms. PR screening only in youth with high depressive symptom screens or in mental health care may miss youth needing further assessment for psychosis., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors listed on this manuscript have no affiliations with or involvement in any organization or entity with any financial interest in the subject matter discussed in this manuscript. There are no conflicts of interest to report., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2022
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3. A Phone Consultation Call Line to Support SBIRT in Pediatric Primary Care.
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Levy S, Fuller A, Kelly S, Lunstead J, Weitzman ER, and Straus JH
- Abstract
Background: Screening Brief Intervention Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) is recommended as a routine part of pediatric primary care, though managing patients with positive screens is challenging. To address this problem, the state of Massachusetts created a call line staffed by pediatric Addiction Medicine specialists to provide consultations to primary care providers and access to a behavioral health provider specially trained in managing adolescent substance use., Objective: To describe the uptake and outcomes of a consultation call line and virtual counseling for managing substance use disorders (SUD) in pediatric primary care., Methods: Service delivery data from consultations and counseling appointments were captured in an electronic database including substance, medication recommendations, level of care recommendations and number of counseling appointments completed for each patient. Summary data is presented here., Results: In all, there were 407 encounters to 108 unique families, including 128 consultations and 279 counseling visits in a one-year period. The most common substances mentioned by healthcare providers were cannabis (64%), nicotine (20%), alcohol (20%), vaping (9%) and opioids (5%). Management in primary care was recommended for 87 (68%) of the consultations. Medications for SUD treatment were recommended for 69 (54%) consultations including two for opioid use disorder., Conclusion: We found that both a statewide consultation call line and virtual counseling to support SBIRT in pediatric primary care were feasible. The majority of consultations resulted in recommendations for treatment in primary care., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Levy, Fuller, Kelly, Lunstead, Weitzman and Straus.)
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- 2022
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4. Comparison of Use of the Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Program and Patient Characteristics Before vs During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Dvir Y, Ryan C, Straus JH, Sarvet B, Ahmed I, and Gilstad-Hayden K
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Facilities and Services Utilization trends, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Massachusetts, Patients statistics & numerical data, Referral and Consultation trends, SARS-CoV-2, Young Adult, COVID-19 psychology, Child Psychiatry, Facilities and Services Utilization statistics & numerical data, Mental Health Services, Patients psychology, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data
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- 2022
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5. Adolescent SBIRT Practices Among Pediatricians in Massachusetts.
- Author
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Levy S, Wiseblatt A, Straus JH, Strother H, Fluet C, and Harris SK
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- Adolescent, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Mass Screening, Massachusetts, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control, Crisis Intervention, Pediatricians, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data, Substance-Related Disorders diagnosis, Substance-Related Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Adolescent Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) in primary care is a key strategy to prevent, identify, and respond to substance use problems and disorders, including opioid and other drug addictions. Despite substantial investment in recent years to increase its implementation, few studies have reported on recent levels of SBIRT implementation among pediatricians. We aimed to assess self-reported use of the SBIRT framework with adolescent patients among Massachusetts pediatricians, and describe trends since an earlier survey., Methods: We analyzed responses to a cross-sectional survey mailed in 2017 to a representative sample of pediatricians in Massachusetts. We computed response frequencies for all SBIRT practice questions. We used the chi-square test to compare current data to data collected in 2014, as we found no demographic differences between the 2 samples., Results: Nearly all pediatricians in the 2017 sample (n = 160) reported annual screening of their adolescent patients (99%). The majority reported giving positive reinforcement (87%), brief advice (92%), counseling (90%), and referral to treatment (66%) in response to screen results. Compared with 2014, a significantly higher proportion of pediatricians in 2017 referred patients who screened positively for problematic alcohol use, but perceived barriers to screening and follow-up remain, such as insufficient time to screen and patient refusal to return., Conclusions: Among respondents to a Massachusetts pediatrician survey, we found high rates of delivering SBIRT in accordance with published guidelines, though barriers remain. Whether the content of the counseling adheres to guidelines is unknown.
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- 2020
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6. Screening Adolescents for Alcohol Use: Tracking Practice Trends of Massachusetts Pediatricians.
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Levy S, Ziemnik RE, Harris SK, Rabinow L, Breen L, Fluet C, Strother H, and Straus JH
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- Adolescent, Humans, Massachusetts, Pediatricians statistics & numerical data, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires statistics & numerical data, Underage Drinking statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: Substance use screening is a recommended component of routine healthcare for adolescents. A 2008 survey of Massachusetts primary care physicians found high rates of screening, but low rates of validated tool use, leading to the concern that physicians may be missing substance use-related problems and disorders. In an effort to improve practice, a cross-disciplinary group developed and distributed an adolescent screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment toolkit in 2009. A new survey of Massachusetts primary care physicians was conducted in 2014; this report describes its findings, and compares them to those from 2008., Methods: A survey was mailed to a randomly selected sample of Massachusetts primary care physicians listed in the state Board of Registration in Medicine database. Item response frequencies were computed. Multiple logistic regression modeling was used to compare 2008 and 2014 responses, while controlling for any demographic differences between samples., Results: Pediatrician respondents in 2014 (analysis N = 130) reported a high rate of annually screening patients for alcohol use (96.2%), but only 56.2% reported using a validated screening tool. Rates of screening and validated tool use were higher in 2014 than 2008. Insufficient knowledge as a reported barrier to screening decreased from 2008 to 2014. However, lack of time or staff resources remained key perceived barriers to screening., Conclusions: Our findings suggest that adolescent alcohol use screening practices among Massachusetts pediatricians have improved in recent years, during a time of national and statewide efforts to educate physicians. However, opportunities for practice improvement remain.
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- 2017
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7. Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project 2.0: A Case Study in Child Psychiatry Access Program Redesign.
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Sarvet BD, Ravech M, and Straus JH
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- Child, Humans, Massachusetts, Primary Health Care organization & administration, Program Evaluation, Referral and Consultation, Child Psychiatry organization & administration, Delivery of Health Care, Integrated methods, Mental Health Services organization & administration, Organizational Case Studies
- Abstract
The Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Program is a statewide public mental health initiative designed to provide consultation, care navigation, and education to assist pediatric primary care providers in addressing mental health problems for children and families. To improve program performance, adapt to changes in the environment of pediatric primary care services, and ensure the program's long-term sustainability, program leadership in consultation with the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health embarked on a process of redesign. The redesign process is described, moving from an initial strategic assessment of program and the planning of structural and functional changes, through transition and implementation., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2017
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8. Behavioral health care for children: the massachusetts child psychiatry access project.
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Straus JH and Sarvet B
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- Child, Child Behavior Disorders therapy, Child Health Services organization & administration, Child Psychiatry statistics & numerical data, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Humans, Massachusetts, Models, Organizational, Pediatrics organization & administration, Child Psychiatry organization & administration, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration
- Abstract
Access to behavioral health care for children is essential to achieving good health care outcomes. Pediatric primary care providers have an essential role to play in identifying and treating behavioral health problems in children. However, they lack adequate training and resources and thus have generally been unable to meet children's need for behavioral health care. The Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project has addressed this problem by delivering telephone child psychiatry consultations and specialized care coordination support to over 95 percent of the pediatric primary care providers in Massachusetts. Established in 2004, the project consists of six regional hubs, each of which has one full-time-equivalent child psychiatrist, licensed therapist, and care coordinator. Collectively, the hubs are available to over 95 percent of the 1.5 million children in Massachusetts. In fiscal year 2013 the Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project served 10,553 children. Pediatric primary care providers enrolled in the project reported a dramatic improvement in their ability to meet the psychiatric needs of their patients. Telephone child psychiatry consultation programs for pediatric primary care providers, many modeled after the Massachusetts project, have spread across the United States., (Project HOPE—The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.)
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- 2014
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9. Medico-legal risk associated with pediatric mental health telephone consultation programs.
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Hobbs Knutson K, Wei MH, Straus JH, Sarvet B, Masek BJ, and Stein BD
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- Humans, Pediatrics, Telemedicine, United States, Child Psychiatry, Community Mental Health Services, Liability, Legal, Malpractice, Primary Health Care, Referral and Consultation, Telephone
- Abstract
Clinicians providing consultation through mental health telephone consultation programs express concern about the potential legal risk of the practice. In this survey of six state mental health telephone consultation program directors, we report the annual number of children referred for consultation and the number of lawsuits against consultant clinicians. Between 2004 and 2010, 3,652 children per year were referred nationally, and there were no medical malpractice lawsuits against clinicians related to telephone consultation program activity. Although medico-legal risk is always present, the findings of this national study suggest the risk for clinicians providing mental health telephone consultation may be lower than perceived.
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- 2014
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10. Clinicians' utilization of child mental health telephone consultation in primary care: findings from Massachusetts.
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Hobbs Knutson K, Masek B, Bostic JQ, Straus JH, and Stein BD
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child Psychiatry methods, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Insurance, Health, Male, Massachusetts, Pediatrics methods, Polypharmacy, Psychotropic Drugs therapeutic use, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Young Adult, Child Health Services methods, Hotlines statistics & numerical data, Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Primary Health Care methods
- Abstract
Objective: The authors examined utilization of the Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project, a mental health telephone consultation service for primary care, hypothesizing that greater use would be related to severe psychiatric diagnoses and polypharmacy., Methods: The authors examined the association between utilization, defined as the mean number of contacts per patient during the 180 days following the initial contact (July 2008-June 2009), and characteristics of the initial contact, including consultation question, the child's primary mental health problem, psychotropic medication regimen, insurance status, and time of year., Results: Utilization (N=4,436 initial contacts, mean=3.83 contacts) was associated with initial contacts about medication management, polypharmacy, public and private health insurance, and time of year. The child's primary mental health problem did not predict utilization., Conclusions: Telephone consultation services address treatment with psychotropic medications, particularly polypharmacy. Joint public-private funding should be considered for such public programs that serve privately insured children.
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- 2014
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11. Bridging the divide between child psychiatry and primary care: the use of telephone consultation within a population-based collaborative system.
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Sarvet B, Gold J, and Straus JH
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- Adolescent, Child, Cooperative Behavior, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders psychology, Mental Disorders therapy, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Surveys and Questionnaires standards, Child Psychiatry methods, Mental Health Services supply & distribution, Primary Health Care methods, Referral and Consultation, Telemedicine methods, Telephone
- Abstract
The Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project is a public system for improving access to care for children with mental health problems in which the provision of telephone consultation by child psychiatry teams to pediatric primary care providers (PCPs) plays a central role. In this article, the practice of telephone consultation within this system is explored through the examination of case studies, demonstrating its use in common clinical scenarios. The telephone consultations provide immediate case-based clinical education, and also serve as a gateway for the provision of as-needed direct child psychiatry evaluation and care coordination services. Most importantly, the telephone consultations build sustaining collaborative relationships, enhancing the ability of PCPs to meet the needs of children with mental health problems., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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12. Improving access to mental health care for children: the Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project.
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Sarvet B, Gold J, Bostic JQ, Masek BJ, Prince JB, Jeffers-Terry M, Moore CF, Molbert B, and Straus JH
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- Adolescent, Child, Child Psychiatry standards, Humans, Mental Health Services standards, Retrospective Studies, United States, Child Psychiatry trends, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration, Mental Health Services trends
- Abstract
Background: Inadequate access to care for mentally ill children and their families is a persistent problem in the United States. Although promotion of pediatric primary care clinicians (PCCs) in detection, management, and coordination of child mental health care is a strategy for improving access, limitations in training, time, and specialist availability represent substantial barriers. The Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project (MCPAP), publicly funded with 6 regional consultation teams, provides Massachusetts PCCs with rapid access to child psychiatry expertise, education, and referral assistance., Methods: Data collected from MCPAP teams measured participation and utilization over 3.5 years from July 1, 2005, to December 31, 2008. Data were analyzed for 35,335 encounters. PCC surveys assessed satisfaction and impact on access to care., Results: The MCPAP enrolled 1341 PCCs in 353 practices covering 95% of the youth in Massachusetts. The MCPAP served 10,114 children. Practices varied in their utilization of the MCPAP, with a mean of 12 encounters per practice per quarter (range: 0-245). PCCs contacted the MCPAP for diagnostic questions (34%), identifying community resources (27%), and consultation regarding medication (27%). Provider surveys revealed improvement in ratings of access to child psychiatry. The rate of PCCs who reported that they are usually able to meet the needs of psychiatric patients increased from 8% to 63%. Consultations were reported to be helpful by 91% of PCCs., Conclusions: PCCs have used and value a statewide system that provides access to teams of psychiatric consultants. Access to child mental health care may be substantially improved through public health interventions that promote collaboration between PCCs and child mental health specialists.
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- 2010
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13. Results of the veterinary enalapril trial to prove reduction in onset of heart failure in dogs chronically treated with enalapril alone for compensated, naturally occurring mitral valve insufficiency.
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Atkins CE, Keene BW, Brown WA, Coats JR, Crawford MA, DeFrancesco TC, Edwards NJ, Fox PR, Lehmkuhl LB, Luethy MW, Meurs KM, Petrie JP, Pipers FS, Rosenthal SL, Sidley JA, and Straus JH
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- Animals, Death, Sudden, Cardiac veterinary, Disease Progression, Disease-Free Survival, Dog Diseases mortality, Dogs, Double-Blind Method, Female, Heart Failure mortality, Heart Failure prevention & control, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Mitral Valve Insufficiency complications, Severity of Illness Index, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors therapeutic use, Antihypertensive Agents therapeutic use, Dog Diseases prevention & control, Enalapril therapeutic use, Heart Failure veterinary, Mitral Valve Insufficiency veterinary
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the efficacy of long-term enalapril administration in delaying the onset of congestive heart failure (CHF)., Design: Placebo-controlled, double-blind, multicenter, randomized trial., Animals: 124 dogs with compensated mitral valve regurgitation (MR)., Procedures: Dogs randomly assigned to receive enalapril or placebo were monitored for the primary endpoint of onset of CHF for < or = 58 months. Secondary endpoints included time from study entry to the combined endpoint of CHF-all-cause death; number of dogs free of CHF at 500, 1,000, and 1,500 days; and mean number of CHF-free days., Results: Kaplan-Meier estimates of the effect of enalapril on the primary endpoint did not reveal a significant treatment benefit. Chronic enalapril administration did have a significant benefit on the combined endpoint of CHF-all-cause death (benefit was 317 days [10.6 months]). Dogs receiving enalapril remained free of CHF for a significantly longer time than those receiving placebo and were significantly more likely to be free of CHF at day 500 and at study end., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Chronic enalapril treatment of dogs with naturally occurring, moderate to severe MR significantly delayed onset of CHF, compared with placebo, on the basis of number of CHF-free days, number of dogs free of CHF at days 500 and study end, and increased time to a combined secondary endpoint of CHF-all-cause death. Improvement in the primary endpoint, CHF-free survival, was not significant. Results suggest that enalapril modestly delays the onset of CHF in dogs with moderate to severe MR.
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- 2007
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14. The interdependence of behavioral and somatic health: implications for conceptualizing health and measuring treatment outcomes.
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Labrie RA, Laplante DA, Peller AJ, Christensen DE, Greenwood KL, Straus JH, Garmon MS, Browne C, and Shaffer HJ
- Abstract
Purpose: The interdependence of behavioral and somatic aspects of various health conditions warrants greater emphasis on an integrated care approach., Theory: We propose that integrated approaches to health and wellness require comprehensive and empirically-valid outcome measures to assess quality of care., Method: We discuss the transition from independent to integrated treatment approaches and provide examples of new systems for integrated assessment of treatment outcome., Results: Evidence suggests that support for an independent treatment approach is waning and momentum is building towards more integrated care. In addition, research evidence suggests integrated care improves health outcomes, and both physicians and patients have favorable impressions of integrated care., Conclusions: As treatment goals in the integrated perspective expand to take into account the intimate relationships among mental illness, overall health, and quality of life, clinicians need to develop outcome measures that are similarly comprehensive., Discussion: Increased recognition, by researchers, providers, and insurers, of the interdependence between behavioral and physical health holds great promise for innovative treatments that could significantly improve patients' lives.
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- 2007
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15. Implementation of a consumer-directed approach in behavioral health care: problems and prospects.
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LaBrie RA, Browne C, Christensen DE, Greenwood KL, Straus JH, Garmon MS, LaPlante DA, Scher S, Peller AJ, and Shaffer HJ
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- Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Cognition Disorders epidemiology, Consumer Behavior, Decision Making, Humans, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Health Services organization & administration, Neuropsychological Tests, Self Efficacy, Stereotyping, Treatment Outcome, United States, Behavior Therapy economics, Mental Disorders economics, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health Services economics, Mental Health Services trends, Patient Participation, Self Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Consumer-directed care, a payment system designed to make patients aware of the costs of care, requires treatment seekers to be active participants in their health care. Core components of consumer-directed care, such as higher deductibles and increased decision-making responsibilities, might preclude its easy translation from medical to behavioral health care. Aspects of behavioral disorders will force providers, insurers, and patients to compensate for unique barriers to increasing self-care, such as stigma, neuropsychological complications, and poor self-efficacy. This column describes important components of consumer-directed care and the unique barriers that behavioral health care creates for those components. Possible best practices are suggested for surmounting those barriers.
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- 2007
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16. Enterprise integration. The CIO tapes. Roundtable discussion.
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Anderson M, Bates L, Brickman RD, Garrin P, Jones MR, Joslyn S, Moloney R, Rierden B, Smith FJ, Sollish L, Straus JH, Swoben J, Wade JC, and Walter DF
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- Computer Security, Confidentiality, Governing Board, Hospital Administrators, Hospital Information Systems standards, Managed Care Programs organization & administration, Managed Care Programs standards, Medical Records Systems, Computerized standards, United States, Delivery of Health Care, Integrated organization & administration, Systems Integration
- Published
- 1997
17. Reporting and using health plan performance information in Massachusetts.
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Jordan HS, Straus JH, and Bailit MH
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- Adolescent, Adult, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data, Data Collection, Female, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Mammography statistics & numerical data, Massachusetts, Medicaid economics, Medicaid standards, Middle Aged, Pregnancy, United States, Health Maintenance Organizations standards, Information Services, Quality of Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: In 1993, 27 corporate and government health care purchasers formed the Massachusetts Healthcare Purchaser Group (MHPG). Sixteen health plans submitted 1992 data on six clinical indicators-mental health inpatient days per patient and inpatient readmission, blood pressure screening, prenatal care, mammography screening, cesarean section (C-section) rates, and asthma admission rates-developed in an earlier pilot effort in response to the quality portion of MHPG's "Cost/Quality Challenge.", Data Collection and Analysis: Detailed data specifications developed in the pilot to ensure uniform data collection were used, with a requested sample size for chart-reviewed measures of 220. A "clinically significant average range" was defined. Health plan performance was summarized for each indicator in a report released in March 1994. REPORTING OF CLINICAL INDICATOR RESULTS: For the six indicators, each plan had a unique pattern of variation from the average range. For prenatal care, mammography, and hypertension, many plans had opportunities for improvement. SURVEY OF PURCHASERS: Most of the purchasers MHPG surveyed in October 1994 about their assessment and use of the Cost/Quality Challenge Report found it useful. RESPONSES TO THE REPORT: To promote quality improvement activities among health plans, MHPG showed purchasers how to pursue performance issues with health plans, held a Best Practice Forum on C-section, and created a follow-up endeavor, the Coordinated Purchasing Initiative., Summary and Conclusions: In spite of potential problems posed by technical deficiencies, costs of data acquisition and quality efforts, and unintended effects of public reporting, purchaser/plan initiatives such as the Cost/Quality Challenge can provide valuable information to purchasers.
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- 1995
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18. Hospitalized teens. Ambulatory care utilization patterns.
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Joshi NP, O'Mara P, Hendershott TH, Vose J, and Straus JH
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- Adolescent, Data Collection, Episode of Care, Female, Humans, Male, Massachusetts epidemiology, Mental Disorders therapy, Patient Admission statistics & numerical data, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Utilization Review statistics & numerical data, Wounds and Injuries therapy, Adolescent Health Services statistics & numerical data, Health Maintenance Organizations statistics & numerical data, Primary Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Twelve- to eighteen-year-olds enrolled in a federally qualified HMO in Central Massachusetts who had an admission to a hospital with a diagnosis of trauma or mental health problems were identified. Routine and episodic health care utilization for a 24-month period of each study case was determined and compared with the same for a comparison group matched for age, sex and length of enrollment. Although information on health habits and lifestyle was often missing from the charts, it was determined that the study cases were less likely to be in school and living with their parents and used episodic care more frequently, especially in the 6 months prior to admission. Both hospitalized and non-hospitalized youth had a higher average number of visits to office-based providers than their national counterparts. The study suggests that (1) greater awareness of morbidity and health care utilization patterns and risk behaviors may enhance prevention efforts; (2) use of instruments to capture more information on health habits and lifestyle may facilitate preventive interventions; (3) collaborations among pediatric primary care providers, the Information Services (IS) and Quality Management (QM) departments may facilitate this type of research in a managed care setting.
- Published
- 1993
19. Referrals from an emergency room to primary care practices at an urban hospital.
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Straus JH, Orr ST, and Charney E
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Child, Child, Preschool, Hospital Bed Capacity, 500 and over, Humans, Infant, Maryland, Patient Compliance, Urban Population, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Primary Health Care statistics & numerical data, Referral and Consultation
- Abstract
Three hundred ninety-eight patients treated in the emergency room for non-urgent complaints who stated that they had no regular source of primary medical care were referred to one of several medical care centers in the area. Overall, 34 per cent of such patients complied with the referral. Correlates of compliance were: age (very young and very old), patient-perceived health status, medically determined need for follow-up care, and having an appointment made by the emergency room provider. Another group of 500 successfully referred patients became excellent users of the primary care office, complying with requested health maintenance and follow-up visits. However, emergency room utilization by the successfully referred patients did not decrease more than among referred patients who did not enroll in the primary care source.
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- 1983
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20. Childhood physical fitness tests: predictor of adult physical activity levels?
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Dennison BA, Straus JH, Mellits ED, and Charney E
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Educational Status, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Risk Factors, Running, Sports, Physical Exertion, Physical Fitness
- Abstract
Regular physical activity has both short- and long-term health benefits in adults. No study has investigated childhood determinants of adult physical activity patterns, however. In a nonconcurrent prospective study, the physical activity levels of 453 young men, 23 to 25 years of age, were compared with their physical fitness test scores as children (10 to 11 years of age and 15 to 18 years of age). The physically active adults had significantly better childhood physical fitness test scores than did the inactive adults. In 224 children, 2 years of fitness test results were available. The risk of physical inactivity in young adulthood was linearly related to the number of low scores on the 548.6-m (600-yd) run and sit-ups tests as children (P less than .001). In stepwise multivariate discriminant analysis, the childhood 548.6-m run score was the best discriminator between currently physically active and inactive adults. Reported parental encouragement of exercise, level of education, participation in organized sports after high school, and reported spousal encouragement of exercise also contributed significantly to the discriminant function. These results demonstrate that physical fitness testing in boys facilitates the identification of those at increased risk of becoming physically inactive young adults.
- Published
- 1988
21. Federally supported primary care training programs and pediatric careers.
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Shelov SP, Alpert JJ, Rayman I, Straus JH, Fallon S, and Boufford J
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- Internship and Residency, Pediatrics economics, United States, Financing, Government, Pediatrics education, Primary Health Care economics
- Published
- 1987
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22. Strategies for reducing inappropriate after-hours telephone calls.
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Caplan SE and Straus JH
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- Emergencies, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Humans, Methods, Time Factors, Urban Population, Attitude of Health Personnel, Communication, Pediatrics, Telephone instrumentation, Telephone methods
- Abstract
It is essential for pediatricians to allow telephone access after office hours, but the volume and the nature of such calls is occasionally resented. This study tests the hypothesis that employment of two interventional strategies could reduce the number of after-hours calls without an increase in emergency room visits. The interventions were: 1) an educational program; and later, 2) a recorded message that revealed the phone number for a second call to reach the pediatrician. The call rate remained the same before and after the educational intervention alone, but after the recorded message was inaugurated, the rate declined 28 percent. After-hours emergency room visits were similar before and after each intervention. This study suggests a simple strategy to modestly reduce after-hours calls.
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- 1988
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23. The optical activity of plasma membranes and its modification by lysolecithin, phospholipase A and phospholipase C.
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Gordon AS, Wallach DF, and Straus JH
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- Animals, Carcinoma, Ehrlich Tumor, Cell Membrane drug effects, Digitalis Glycosides pharmacology, Erythrocytes analysis, Humans, Light, Optical Rotatory Dispersion, Peptides analysis, Spectrum Analysis, Cell Membrane analysis, Lysophosphatidylcholines pharmacology, Phospholipases pharmacology
- Published
- 1969
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24. The influence of tertiary structure upon the optical activity of three globular proteins: myoglobin, hemoglobin and lysozyme.
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Straus JH, Gordon AS, and Wallach DF
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- Animals, Cetacea, Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Computers, Crystallography, Humans, Optical Rotatory Dispersion, Spectrum Analysis, Hemoglobins, Muramidase, Myoglobin
- Published
- 1969
25. THE MULTIPLICATION OF BACTERIOPHAGE IN VIVO AND ITS PROTECTIVE EFFECT AGAINST AN EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION WITH SHIGELLA DYSENTERIAE.
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Dubos RJ, Straus JH, and Pierce C
- Abstract
1. Anti-Shiga bacteriophage injected into the general circulation can multiply in the brain of mice infected intracerebrally with Shigella dysenteriae. 2. Under proper conditions, the injection of active bacteriophage into the general circulation can protect mice against an otherwise fatal intracerebral infection with Shigella dysenteriae. 3. The protection so induced appears to depend upon the early establishment of a high bacteriophage level in the infected animal.
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- 1943
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26. Inside-out red cell membrane vesicles: preparation and purification.
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Steck TL, Weinstein RS, Straus JH, and Wallach DF
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- Centrifugation, Density Gradient, Freeze Etching, Histocytochemistry, Humans, Methods, Microscopy, Electron, Cell Membrane anatomy & histology, Erythrocytes cytology
- Abstract
Plasma membranes purified from human red cells were Converted into small vesicleS by disruption in alkaline buffer of low ionic strength. Most of these vesicles were inside-out. The presence of divalent cations prevented this inversion. The inside-out vesicles were separatcd from right-side-out vesicles by centrifugration to equilibrium in dextran density gradients.
- Published
- 1970
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27. Vaginal adenosis: diagnosis by palpation.
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Straus JH, Lucas WE, and Naftolin F
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- Adenocarcinoma chemically induced, Adult, Diethylstilbestrol adverse effects, Female, Humans, Maternal-Fetal Exchange, Pregnancy, Vaginal Neoplasms chemically induced, Adenocarcinoma diagnosis, Palpation, Vaginal Neoplasms diagnosis
- Published
- 1973
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28. A model for the behavior of vesicles in density gradients: implications for fractionation.
- Author
-
Steck TL, Straus JH, and Wallach DF
- Subjects
- Cell Fractionation, Cell Membrane, Dextrans, Erythrocytes, Glycerol, Humans, Mathematics, Models, Biological, Osmolar Concentration, Osmotic Pressure, Sucrose, Centrifugation, Density Gradient, Membranes
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
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