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Addressing Mental Health Disparities with Latino and Russian Clients- A Project Overview Graham Harriman, MA, Marcela Dixon, CHW, Sergiy Barsukov, CHW A Project Supported by the Center for Mental Health Services of the Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)
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Multnomah County Health Department County-run system of primary care safety net clinics – part of public health department Portland, Oregon and suburbs – 675,000 7 clinics serving approximately 26,000 patients/year, 99% below 200% of poverty
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Patients Racial/Ethnic mix 44% Hispanic 38% Caucasian (includes Eastern European) 9% African American 11% of clients identify Russian as their first language
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Environment Health Information System indicated we were significantly under-diagnosing mental disorders in ethnic population of patients High levels of psychosocial stressors (violence, social & cultural isolation, poverty, family disruption) When mental disorders identified, great resistance to being referred to community system of care
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In Their Own Words Acculturative stress is common- isolation the paramount concern Many Latina attendees of focus groups reported issues of domestic violence Language and culture are barriers to care Focus group results August 2003
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Action Plan Integrate mental health into primary care setting Utilize Chronic Care Model (Wagner) Bicultural-bilingual therapist staff placed in primary care clinics Emphasize Community Health Worker interventions Utilize the Stanford Chronic Disease Self Management Program (Lorig et al.)
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Data Service Utilization Patient Satisfaction Outcome Data Patient Satisfaction Assessment Outcomes Provider Satisfaction
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SERVICE UTILIZATION
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CLIENTS SEEN TO DATE Average Number of New Clients Per Month = 26.5
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CHW VISIT LOCATION
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FOCUS OF CHW VISITS
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REFERRAL SOURCES
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RESULTS TO DATE
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Patient Satisfaction Focus Group Results 6 Focus Groups (3 in Spanish, 3 in Russian) 24 Participated in Spanish Groups 26 Participated in Russian Groups Participants were asked about migration, acculturation, system access, experiences with County services, and suggestions for improvement
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Latino Focus Groups Report Participants stated they use many coping skills to manage mental health concerns, including walking, seeing a therapist, therapy groups, taking medication, going to church and being active Tomando Control de Su Salud (Spanish version of CDSMP) received positive statements Therapy sessions well regarded Referral system to MH Disparities Project is “seamless” from clients’ point of view Comments on Project Personnel were positive overall
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Russian Speaking Focus Group Report Positive statements on provider care, including Russian Speaking CHW in project, assistance with translation, access to care, and compassionate demeanor mentioned Concerns raised about interpreters- language difficulties, biases towards mental health
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OUTCOME DATA
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SF – 12 Mental Health Functioning
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PHQ-9 Depression Score
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Clinical Outcomes Therapist vs No Therapist Intervention
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PROVIDER Satisfaction 49 out of 65 responded to survey 75% response rate Survey handed out at provider meetings at clinic sites
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93% “agreed” that CHWs were “perceived as valuable members of the clinical support staff.” Of providers aware of project, % “satisfied” or “very satisfied”: 83% with the CHWs, 75% with project therapists 71% with the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program Provider Response
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LESSONS LEARNED Involvement of therapists produces significantly enhanced outcomes Many of the services are not reimbursable Mental health carve outs increase difficulty of providing services in primary care settings Religious/cultural beliefs create special challenges to delivering mental health treatment
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LESSONS LEARNED Mental health services in primary care clinics produces clinically significant results for Latino patients and Russian-speaking refugees diagnosed with depression CHWs are a recognized and valued component of clinical support Marketing of program services is essential Some providers have difficulty identifying clients who may benefit from CHW services
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GOING FORWARD Investigate FQHC reimbursement mechanisms for CHW-delivered services. Advocate with state Medicaid Office about fiscal strategies Integrate depression and anxiety treatment with other chronic conditions and investigate “incident to” billing methodologies Work closely with ethnic population advocacy groups to demand reimbursement for services. Seek more immediate support from foundations
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