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Garrett Eastman

Tackling the Costly Issue of Employee Depression Using a Collaborative Care Model - 0 views

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    Among the research in collaborative care, the most comprehensive work has been done by Wayne Katon, MD, and Jürgen Unützer, MD, both of the University of Washington. Under the latter's collaborative care model, participants had fewer suicidal thoughts, higher recovery rates and improved function, and more depression-free days compared to typical primary care treatment. In addition, Unützer's research has shown potential overall health care savings of $3,300 per individual over a four-year period compared to individuals in usual primary care treatment.
Tom Fields

Hospital Partnership Offers Pathways-Based Case Management Program, Leading to Enhanced... - 0 views

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    The program also connects patients to other community resources and addresses health, social, and logistical barriers to care. The program significantly enhanced access to appropriate care and improved client understanding of their medical condition, resulting in enhanced health functioning and a significant decline in emergency department use and costs for nonemergent conditions.
Tom Fields

Care Coordination, Peer Support, and Discretionary Fund Improve Quality of Life and Red... - 0 views

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    Offered at no cost to participants, the program has enhanced access to treatment, employment, and job training; reduced suicide and self-harm attempts, hospitalizations, emergency department visits, incarcerations, and homelessness; and significantly lowered health care and other mental illness-related costs.
Garrett Eastman

The psychiatric profile of the U.S. patient population across age groups - 0 views

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    "As the U.S. population undergoes continuous shifts the population's health profile changes dynamically resulting in more or less expression of certain psychiatric disorders and utilization of health-care resources. In this paper, we analyze national data on the psychiatric morbidity of American patients and their summated cost in different age groups. Methods: The latest data (2009) on the number of hospital discharges and national bill (hospital charges) linked with psychiatric disorders were extracted from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS). Results: National data shows that mood disorders are the largest diagnostic category in terms of percentage of psychiatri-crelated discharges in the 1 - 17 years age group. The proportion decreases gradually as age progresses while delirium, dementia, amnestic and other cognitive disorders increase exponentially after 65 years of age. Schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders as well as alcohol and substance-related disorders peak in the working age groups (18 - 64 years). From an economic point of view, mood disorders in the 18 - 44 age group has the highest national bill ($5.477 billion) followed by schizophrenic and other psychotic disorders in the same age group ($4.337 billion) and mood disorders in the 45 - 64 age group ($4.310 billion). On the third place come schizophrenic and other psychotic disorders in the 45 - 64 age group ($3.931 billion). Conclusion: This paper illustrates the high cost of psychiatric care in the U.S., especially the large fraction of healthcare money spent on working-age patients suffering from mood disorders. This underlines psychiatric cost-efficiency as a vital topic in the current healthcare debate. "
Garrett Eastman

Experts-Assess-Impact-of-Health-Reform-on-Mental-Health-Coverage-11110.aspx (applicatio... - 0 views

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    "unless states carefully regulate the plans that compete in the exchanges and the benefits that they offer, people with mental illness, who typically have higher health care costs, are at risk of receiving poorer quality care."
Garrett Eastman

Making Healthy Choices: A Guide on Psychotropic Medications for Youth in Foster Care - 0 views

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    A guide prepared by the National Resource Center for Youth Development
Tom Fields

Health Plan and Psychiatric Hospitals Reduce Readmissions by Reviewing Data and Develop... - 0 views

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    The program significantly reduced overall readmission rates at participating hospitals. Patients involved in specific quality improvement initiatives that came out of the program also experienced significantly fewer readmissions, along with associated declines in inpatient days and costs.
Tom Fields

Affordable Housing Community Offers Seniors Onsite Health Care Coordination and Support... - 0 views

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    In a year-long pilot test with 65 residents, the program reduced hospital admissions and readmissions, had no bounce backs to nursing homes, decreased falls, improved nutritional status, and increased levels of physical activity.
Garrett Eastman

DoD, VA, and HHS Report on Improving Mental Health Services for Military, Veterans, and... - 0 views

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    from the introduction: "his progress report outlines advances made to date to expand the quality and availability of mental health care services for active military service members, veterans, and their families. Highlights of the report include: Increasing the capacity of the Veterans Crisis Line Building partnerships between the VA and community-based mental health providers Increasing the number of VA mental health providers and peer specialists Implementing a national suicide prevention campaign."
Tom Fields

Mental Health Care Resources - 2 views

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    Large compilation of online resources for mental healthcare professionals, including innovation profiles and tools.
Garrett Eastman

Review of Veterans' Access to Mental Health Care - 1 views

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    "Summary: Congress and the VA Secretary requested the OIG determine how accurately the Veterans Health Administration records wait times for mental health services for both new patients and established patients visits and if the wait time data VA collects is an accurate depiction of the veteran's ability to access those services."
Garrett Eastman

The Child Mind Institute, With 11 National Partners, Speak Up for Kids - 1 views

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    "The Child Mind Institute, dedicated to transforming mental health care for children everywhere, is waging war against the stigma, lack of awareness, and misinformation that cause so many children to miss out on treatments that can change their lives with its second annual national public education program, Speak Up for Kids. It will be held during National Children's Mental Health Awareness Week, May 6-12, 2012."
Garrett Eastman

We don't call them "wait lists" - 0 views

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    Access to children's mental health care in Mass. still problematic
Garrett Eastman

Mental health advocates: Stigmas still hurting treatment options - 0 views

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    Report from a conference in Wisconsin
Sarah Eeee

1 Boring Old Man » either way… - 0 views

  • The point of bringing this discussion up is that I said when the etiology and treatment of a particular condition became clear, it would no longer be "psychiatric" and gave as examples Syphilis and Epilepsy. I was arguing that psychiatry was the medical specialty that dealt with the things that didn’t fit, the ambiguous.
    • Sarah Eeee
       
      Interesting take on the role of psychiatry
  • If many depressions are in the life/mind ball park, then those patients need someone who thinks like me. Doctors didn’t give up on diabetics because they hadn’t yet discovered insulin. The notion that psychiatry is only clinical neuroscience as Dr. Insel says just seems strange to me. Sick people don’t much care about "future help." They’re more in a "right now" frame of mind.
  • We’re still hacking at mental illnesses, doing what we can.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Thus far, "souped up" antidepressant  therapy doesn’t seem to have added very much, but hope springs eternal for some. The problem for me is that the STAR*D and CO-MED studies have been so oddly done and reported that I can’t even tell if they answer their own stated questions either way…
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