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Mental Health Collaborative Care and its Role in Primary Care Settings

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2013

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Springer Science + Business Media
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Goodrich, David E., Amy M. Kilbourne, Kristina M. Nord, and Mark S. Bauer. 2013. “Mental Health Collaborative Care and Its Role in Primary Care Settings.” Curr Psychiatry Rep 15 (8) (July 24). doi:10.1007/s11920-013-0383-2.

Abstract

Collaborative care models (CCMs) provide a pragmatic strategy to deliver integrated mental health and medical care for persons with mental health conditions served in primary care settings. CCMs are team-based intervention to enact system-level redesign by improving patient care through organizational leadership support, provider decision support, and clinical information systems as well as engaging patients in their care through self-management support and linkages to community resources. The model is also a cost-efficient strategy for primary care practices to improve outcomes for a range of mental health conditions across populations and settings. CCMs can help achieve integrated care aims under healthcare reform yet organizational and financial issues may affect adoption into routine primary care. Notably, successful implementation of CCMs in routine care will require alignment of financial incentives to support systems redesign investments, reimbursements for mental health providers, and adaptation across different practice settings and infrastructure to offer all CCM components.

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Mental health, Co-occurring conditions, Primary care, PCP, Integrated care, Collaborative care, Chronic Care Model, CCM, Accountable care organization, ACO, Patient centered medical home, Screening, Diagnosis, Treatment, Access, Mental health services, Psychiatry, Bipolar disorder, Mood disorder, Substance abuse disorder, Anxiety disorder, Serious mental illness

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