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Managing Care While Staying in the Moment October 8, 2015
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Learning Objectives 1.List and describe the core components of the IMPACT/Collaborative Care model of care 2.Identify ways to blend IMPACT and other evidence- based models such as behavioral health consultation 3.Describe the IT and clinical infrastructure needed to provide population-based primary care behavioral health 4.Identify the value of participating in a learning collaborative
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Definition of Integrated Care The care that results from a practice team of primary care and behavioral health clinicians, working together with patients and families, using a systematic and cost- effective approach to provide patient-centered care for a defined population This care may address mental health, substance abuse conditions, health behaviors, (including their contribution to chronic medical conditions), life stressors and crisis, stress-related physical symptoms, ineffective patterns of health care utilization Peek, C.J. National Integration Academy Council (2013). Lexicon for behavioral Health and Primary Care. Integration: Concepts and Definitions. Developed by Expert Consensus. In Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
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Rarely Only Behavioral Disorder Mental Health/ Substance Use Cancer 10-20% Neuro- logic Disorders 10-20% Diabetes 10-30% Heart Disease 10-30% Smoking, Obesity, Physical Inactivity 40- 70% Chronic Physical Pain 25-50%
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What does work? Core Principles of IMPACT/Collaborative Care Patient-centered team care/Collaborative Care – Collaboration not co-location – Team members have to learn new skills Population-based care – Patients tracked in a registry; no one falls through the cracks Measurement-based treatment to target – Treatments are actively changed until the clinical goals are achieved Evidence-based care – Treatments used are evidence-based Accountable care – Providers are accountable and reimbursed for quality of care and clinical outcomes, not just the volume of care provided
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Collaborative Care Team Care Model Two processes: 1. Systematic diagnosis and outcomes tracking – PHQ-9 to facilitate diagnosis and track depression outcomes 2. Stepped Care – Change treatment according to evidence-based algorithm if patient is not improving – Relapse prevention once patient is improved
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Primary Care Provider Role Oversees all aspects of patient’s care Diagnoses common mental disorders – Brief screeners (e.g., PHQ-9, GAD-7) Starts & prescribes pharmacotherapy Introduces collaborative care team and care manager Collaborates with care manager and psychiatric consultant to make treatment adjustments as needed
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One Treatment Plan Team-based care: patient, PCP, BHC, psychiatrist all involved in developing and carrying out the treatment plan Regular communication through team huddles, shared appointments All members of the team give consistent recommendations
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Two New “Team Members” Behavioral Health Clinician (BHC) Patient education/self- management support Close follow-up to make sure pts don’t ‘fall through the cracks’ Support anti-depressant Rx by PCP Brief counseling (behavioral activation, PST-PC, CBT, IPT) Facilitate treatment change/referral to mental health Relapse prevention Consulting Psychiatrist Caseload consultation for care manager and PCP (population- based) Diagnostic consultation on difficult cases Consultation focused on patients not improving as expected Recommend additional treatment/referral according to evidence-based guidelines
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BHC Role Supports and collaborates closely with PCPs managing patients in primary care Patient education/self- management support Brief counseling (behavioral activation, PST-PC, CBT, IPT) Support anti-depressant Rx by PCP Supports medication management by PCPs Reviews cases with psychiatric consultant weekly Facilitate treatment change/referral to mental health Relapse prevention
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Psychiatric Consultant Role Caseload-focused consultation supported by BHC Better access: – PCPs get input on their patients’ behavioral health within a day/week vs. months – Focuses in-person visits on the most challenging patients Regular communication: – Psychiatrist has regular (weekly) meetings with the BHC – Reviews all of the patients who are not improving and makes treatment recommendations
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Measurement-Based Care (PHQ-9) Assists with identification and diagnosis Tracks 9 core symptoms over time Easy to use: can be self-administered and done over the phone A good communication and teaching tool Available in many languages: http://www.phqscreeners.com/
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Population/Care Management Use a clinical registry to: – Proactively follow up to prevent people from ‘falling through the cracks’ – Systematically track treatment response – Facilitate treatment planning and adjustment Combat ‘clinical inertia’: patients staying on ineffective treatments for too long – Know when it is time to get consultation/get help and when it is time to change treatment
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Depression Registry
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Transforming Practice Through Participation in a Learning Collaborative
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What is a learning collaborative? Structured approach for change Adopt best practices in multiple settings Uses adult learning principles & techniques Time-limited learning process Shared learning and collaboration
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Breakthrough LC Model http://www.ihi.org
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Components of Our LC Learning Sessions Training Manuals Action Periods Apply Skills Test Changes Collaborative Meetings Ongoing TA & Support Measure Outcomes Share Progress
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Learning Collaborative Process Create Change Package Develop Charter Select Teams Begin Pre- Work Hold Learning Sessions Implement Action Periods Measure Progress
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The Charter Mission – Primary focus of the collaborative Aims – Written statements of expected accomplishments Expectations – Commitments to meet during LC Community Care Provider agencies Other partners
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Aims Process Aim 1: – By March 31, 2016, 100% of adults, age 18 years and older, are screened for depression using the PHQ-2 within the previous 12 months Process Aim 2: – By March 31, 2016, 50% of individuals with a PHQ-9 score >10 are seen by the behavioral health clinician Outcome Aim 1: – By March 31, 2016, 50% of individuals with a PHQ-9 score >10 have a 50% improvement in score after 3 months of treatment
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Select the Teams Quality Improvement Teams (QIT) – Executive leadership – Clinical/quality improvement – Leadership – Lead behavioral health provider – Health center patient – Psychiatrist Intervention faculty – Content experts Support and TA teams (Community Care staff)
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Milestones
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PDSA Cycles: Plan-Do-Study-Act PDSA cycles are how aims are achieved Small tests of change Conduct one or more each month Measure impact Submit workbook to producer Share progress in monthly collaborative calls
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Measure Progress on Aims Update monthly Excel workbooks – Pre-formatted – Automatically graphs progress – Submitted monthly to producer – Reviewed by facilitator – Shared with collaborative Synthesized in quarterly reports Summative final report
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Process Aim 1 By March 31, 2016, 100% of adults, age 18 years and older, are screened for depression using the PHQ-2 within the previous 12 months
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Process Aim 2 By March 31, 2016, 100% of patients with a PHQ-9 score >10 are seen by the behavioral health provider
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Outcome Aim By March 31, 2016, 50% of patients with a PHQ-9 score >10 have a 50% improvement in score within 3 months
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Monthly Progress Assessment
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Questions ?
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Contact Suzanne Daub, LCSW Senior Director, Integrated Care Initiatives, Community Care daubs@ccbh.com Amy Lambert Director, Behavioral Health, La Comunidad Hispana alambert@lchps.org Helen Wooten, LCSW Behavioral Health Consultant, Berks Community Health Center hwooten@berkschc.org
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