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Telehealth Collaborative Care Led by Clinical Pharmacists for People With Psychosis or Bipolar Disorder: A Propensity Weighted Comparison With Usual Psychiatric Care.

Authors :
Iturralde E
Fazzolari L
Slama NE
Alexeeff SE
Sterling SA
Awsare S
Koshy MT
Shia M
Source :
The Journal of clinical psychiatry [J Clin Psychiatry] 2024 Jan 29; Vol. 85 (1). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jan 29.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective: People with psychosis or bipolar disorder (severe and persistent mental illness [SPMI]) are at high risk for poor psychiatric and chronic illness outcomes, which could be ameliorated through improved health care quality. This study assessed whether a telehealth, collaborative care program managed by psychiatric clinical pharmacists (SPMI Population Care) was associated with improved health care quality for adults with SPMI in a large California health system.<br /> Methods: This retrospective cohort study used electronic health record data to compare 968 program enrollees at 6 demonstration sites (Population Care) to 8,339 contemporaneous patients with SPMI at 6 non-program sites (Usual Care). SPMI diagnoses were based on ICD-10-CM diagnostic codes. Primary outcomes were optimal psychotropic medication adherence, guideline-recommended glycemic screening, annual psychiatrist visit, and emergency department use. Difference-in-difference analyses assessed change in outcomes from 12 months pre- to 12 months post-enrollment using overlap weighting with high dimensional propensity scores to balance participant characteristics across groups. Participant data were collected from January 1, 2020, to June 30, 2022.<br /> Results: From pre- to post-enrollment, Population Care was associated with greater achievement of psychotropic medication adherence and glycemic screening (+6 and +9 percentage points), but unexpectedly with a decrease in annual psychiatrist visits (-6 percentage points) and no significant change in emergency department use, relative to Usual Care. More than 75% of Population Care participants attended an intake and ≥ 1 follow-up visits. Participants with psychosis (26% of sample) had similar results as those with bipolar disorder.<br /> Conclusions: Clinical pharmacist-led telehealth collaborative care has potential to improve psychopharmacologic treatment adherence and recommended disease preventive screening for people with psychosis or bipolar disorder.<br /> (© Copyright 2024 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1555-2101
Volume :
85
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38301189
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4088/JCP.23m14917