Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAngel Marshall Modified over 8 years ago
1
Depression CDSS Charles Kitzman, Barbary Baer, Sudha Poosa
2
The Project To maximize BH efficiencies while maintaining quality care Workflow optimization FQHC integrated BH model Strategic partnership Continuity of care/chart sharing Advanced primary care practice 2
3
Environment FQHC northern CA county Woefully inadequate BH services PH contractual outpatient Demand > Access Obligation to have streamlined services Filter inadequate referrals Time for appropriate patients 3
4
Backdrop Higher rates for Suicide >50% 65 or older 4
5
Conditions leading to death - rates in Shasta County 5
6
County crisis stabilization 6
7
Rank by county 7
8
Bottling the ends Our approach sought to narrow scope Why? It’s a diverse field with lots of variability. Makes it difficult to study Many tools, many interpretations Depression is our focus PQH-9 and lab results respectively 8
9
Rationale for screening Only half of depressed patients are diagnosed by their primary care physician Patients with serious mental illness are 23% more likely to have a non-psychiatric hospitalization compared to the rest of the population. At $6000/admission, this adds $16 million to California’s Medi-Cal program Depression is associated with greater health service use, greater morbidity & mortality, increased medical costs, not to mention unnecessary suffering 9
10
Screening Triggers 10
11
PHQ-9 Advantages Self-administered Freely available Short (9 items) Has been validated in Spanish Sensitivity: from 94.4% (cutoff point >= 9) to 88.9% (cutoff point >= 13) Specificity: from 73.3% (cutoff point >= 9) to 86.7% (cutoff point >= 13) Original study: Sensitivity for major depression: 88% for scores > 10 Specificity for major depression: 88% Scores of 5, 10, 15, 20 represented mild, moderate, moderately severe, severe depression respectively 11
12
PHQ-9 Questionnaire 12
13
Depression CDSS flowchart 13
14
Depression CDSS Mindmap 14
15
System : Input Demographics Chief complaint HPI (History of present illness) Other illnesses Medications Life events 15
16
System : Architecture and Interface Enterprise wide client-server based architecture Architecture will comprise database and the rules engine Compliant with standards – HIPAA, LOINC, HL7, etc. Use of drop menus and logic checks Use of clinic reminders and alerts Capability of creating individual care plans with self- management information and disease severity rating Linked with, but not a substitute for electronic medical records. Will be integrated at the point of care PHQ-9 entry can be made by the patient, nurse or the clinician 16
17
System : Output & Workflow Context-specific decision support in real time Test score & risk stratification Treatment regimen Whom to refer the patient to (level of BH clinician) When should the patient be tested / re-evaluated When to administer medications to the patient Treatment options No treatment Watchful waiting Psychotherapy / counseling Anti-depressant medication Combination therapies 17
18
System : Output & Workflow 18
19
Evaluation Audit of inappropriate referrals with an expectation of declining numbers Increased access or an increase in encounters per clinic hour for BH staff Increase in consistent use of screening tools by PC staff Log trigger results to check provider compliance with tool suggestions Better outcomes 19
20
Conclusions Difficult to separate operations from clinical decision piece BH is very complex field to understand Actually will beta-test in the clinic with a few providers 20
21
Q & A 21
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.