• Trending
  • Latest
    Sign in Sign up
    • Log In
    • Register
    • Home
    • Discover
    • Experts
    • Home
    • Discover
    • Experts
    • Learning Lab
    • Home
    • Discover
    • Experts
    • Learning Lab
    • Mashup Score: 4
      Integrating Board-Certified Psychiatric Pharmacists in a Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic - 1 year(s) ago

      Demand for mental health services has dramatically increased in recent years, raising concerns about the availability of service providers to meet these increased needs. One approach to expanding access to care is the use of highly qualified board-certified psychiatric pharmacists (BCPPs). However, the implementation of programs for integrating BCPPs has not been well characterized in community mental health settings. This column describes the development and implementation of a comprehensive practice model to incorporate BCPPs in a certified community behavioral health clinic. The authors report the results from the first 14 months of BCPP integration (based on 3,221 direct patient care interventions), offer recommendations, and highlight lessons learned.

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        A service model in which board-certified psychiatric pharmacists are embedded in behavioral health care may help address mental health provider shortages. https://t.co/3MzBuhdU45 https://t.co/H56KAAhYbV

    • Mashup Score: 1
      Exploring Data Collection Priorities of Community Partners in Early Psychosis Care - 1 year(s) ago

      Objective: Learning health care networks can significantly improve the effectiveness, consistency, and cost-effectiveness of care delivery. As part of a data harmonization process, incorporation of the perspectives of community partners to maximize the relevance and utility of the data is critical. Methods: A mixed-methods focus group study was conducted with early psychosis program providers, leadership, service users, and family members to explore their priorities regarding data collection in early psychosis care. Focus group transcripts were analyzed through thematic analysis. Results: Twenty-two focus groups comprising 178 participants were conducted across 10 early psychosis programs. Participants considered functioning, quality of life, recovery, and symptoms of psychosis as key outcomes to assess, although variation by participants’ roles was also evident. Participants emphasized the clinical utility of assessing a broad range of predictors of care outcomes, favored a broad conc

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        Providers, service users, and family members consider functioning, quality of life, recovery, and reduced psychosis symptoms key outcomes of early psychosis care. https://t.co/0TXXuc17L5 https://t.co/AeXOwXojL6

    • Mashup Score: 3
      The Role of Black Churches in Promoting Mental Health for Communities of Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Black Americans - 1 year(s) ago

      Objective: Churches in socioeconomically disadvantaged neighborhoods serve as safe havens in many Black communities. Churches provide faith and charitable services but often have limited resources to address the mental health needs of their communities. This article reports on a collaborative effort, driven by members of a Black church, to understand mental health needs, coping strategies, and resilience factors in a community of socioeconomically disadvantaged Black Americans. Methods: A community-based participatory research effort was established among a church, a community mental health organization, clinicians, and researchers to interview and survey individuals residing near the church. Results: The sample consisted of 59 adults, most of whom were ages 46–65 years, men (N=34, 58%), and unemployed (N=46, 78%). Mean scores on the Patient Health Questionnaire–9 (9.2±7.7) and Generalized Anxiety Disorder–7 scale (9.4±6.7) were almost three times higher than those reported by studies

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        A church-led, community-based participatory research effort helps promote mental health in a socioeconomically disadvantaged Black community. https://t.co/u6jL0qHG9W https://t.co/Xb3MgycslW

    • Mashup Score: 0
      Promoting Positive Self-Identity of Youths With Mental Disorders: Collaboration Between Academia and a Ministry of Education - 1 year(s) ago

      Inclusive schools reflect the dominant approach to education, yet many youths with mental disorders still attend special education schools. Although special education schools address educational, social, and developmental needs, they may increase students’ self-stigma and hinder positive identity formation. Israel’s Ministry of Education and an academic community mental health department partnered to address this challenge by developing a manual-based intervention for special education school settings. About 180 teachers were trained, and approximately 400 students participated in the self-management and positive identity group intervention. This partnership demonstrates the importance and potential of collaborations to address challenges that arise in real-world settings.

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        A government-academia partnership’s new intervention helps youths with mental disorders embrace positive self-identity and lessen self-stigma. https://t.co/wE4FCpiafN https://t.co/0zynYuEpfS

    • Mashup Score: 10
      Self-Pay Outpatient Mental Health Care for Children and Adolescents, by Socioeconomic Status - 1 year(s) ago

      Objective: Many parents struggle to find mental health care for their children, and many mental health clinicians do not accept insurance payments. The authors aimed to estimate the frequency and cost of self-pay psychotherapy and psychotropic medication management visits for youths and to determine how service use varies by family income. Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional analysis was performed among youths ages 5–17 years in the 2018–2020 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. Specialist visits included those with psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, and mental health counselors or family therapists. Results: Approximately one in five of 13,639 outpatient mental health specialist visits were self-pay, with psychologists (23% of visits) and social workers (24% of visits) most likely to see youths on a self-pay basis. Use of self-pay care was strongly associated with higher income, but even families earning <$28,000 per year utilized some self-pay care, at a median cost of $95

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        Almost 1 of 5 child mental health visits are paid for out of pocket, burdening families with high costs and exacerbating inequities in access to care. Author handles: @LindsayOverhage @NicoleBensonMD @herlab_equity https://t.co/vEl21gd0FH https://t.co/CaYjoQe0xh

    • Mashup Score: 1
      Investing in School Mental Health: Strategies to Wisely Spend Federal and State Funding - 1 year(s) ago

      In the context of the current youth mental health crisis, it is prudent to reconsider how resources are allocated to facilitate the delivery of effective and comprehensive supports and services to children and adolescents. Schools are the main delivery sites for youth mental health services. Many districts have adopted comprehensive school mental health systems (CSMHS) to provide a multitiered approach comprising mental health promotion, prevention, and intervention to students via partnerships between school and community health and behavioral health providers. COVID-19 relief funding and other new federal and state investments in school mental health have led to expansions of school mental health programming in most states. An impending federal funding cliff necessitates an examination of how to wisely invest now to achieve the greatest positive future impact on youth mental health. To capitalize on opportunities to sustain effective school mental health and maximize return on invest

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        In the context of the youth mental health crisis and an impending gap in federal funding, states and schools have many opportunities to maximize federal assistance. @drsharonhoover @ncsmhtweets https://t.co/zVtwKA5ufu https://t.co/n4LEHN0iSM

    • Mashup Score: 1
      A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Pay-for-Performance Initiative to Reduce Costs of Care for High-Need Psychiatric Patients - 1 year(s) ago

      Objective: Pay-for-performance (P4P) initiatives hold promise for improving health care delivery but are rarely applied to behavioral health or tested in randomized controlled trials (RCTs). This RCT examined the effectiveness of a P4P initiative to reduce total cost of 24-hour care among patients with high needs for psychiatric care in a large county in California. Methods: From August 2016 to March 2022, a total of 652 adult residents of Santa Clara County, California, were enrolled in a P4P initiative (mean±SD age=46.7±13.3 years, 61% male, 51% White, and 60% diagnosed as having a bipolar or psychotic disorder). Participants were randomly assigned to usual full-service partnerships from the county (N=327) or a comparable level of care from a contractor who agreed to a schedule of financial penalties and rewards based on whether enrollees (N=325) used more or less care than a historical cohort of similar county patients. The primary outcome was total cost of 24-hour psychiatric servi

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        In an RCT with high-need patients, a pay-for-performance initiative was no more effective than usual care in reducing costs of 24-hour psychiatric care. @BlonigenDaniel https://t.co/JulHGLvD1d https://t.co/cCRV9c5Fce

    • Mashup Score: 4
      Roles of Hospital Type and Community Setting in Rate of Screening for Metabolic Disorders Among Psychiatric Patients - 1 year(s) ago

      Objective: Globally, rates of metabolic disorders continue to climb, leading to significant disease morbidity and mortality. Individuals with mental illness are particularly prone to obesity, and some medications, such as antipsychotics, may increase the risk for metabolic disorders. The American Psychiatric Association and the American Diabetes Association recommend that patients taking antipsychotic medications receive regular screening for metabolic disorders. This study examined hospital and community factors associated with screening these patients for such disorders. Methods: The authors combined Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) hospital-level data on screening for metabolic disorders among patients with an antipsychotic prescription with community data, including urbanization classification, social vulnerability, and metabolic disease presence and risk factors. Data were merged at the county level and evaluated with a nonparametric multivariate regression model.

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        Rates of screening for metabolic disorders in U.S. inpatient settings are generally high, but rates in some psychiatric facilities lag behind those of acute care and critical access hospitals. https://t.co/cJEUT5UWnr https://t.co/vN6r8qg7nk

    • Mashup Score: 3
      Suicide Screening, Risk Assessment, and Lethal Means Counseling During Zero Suicide Implementation - 1 year(s) ago

      Objective: The authors measured implementation of Zero Suicide (ZS) clinical practices that support identification of suicide risk and risk mitigation, including screening, risk assessment, and lethal means counseling, across mental health specialty and primary care settings. Methods: Six health care systems in California, Colorado, Michigan, Oregon, and Washington participated. The sample included members ages ≥13 years from 2010 to 2019 (N=7,820,524 patients). The proportions of patients with suicidal ideation screening, suicide risk assessment, and lethal means counseling were estimated. Results: In 2019, patients were screened for suicidal ideation in 27.1% (range 5.0%–85.0%) of mental health visits and 2.5% (range 0.1%–35.0%) of primary care visits among a racially and ethnically diverse sample (44.9% White, 27.2% Hispanic, 13.4% Asian, and 7.7% Black). More patients screened positive for suicidal ideation in the mental health setting (10.2%) than in the primary care setting (3.8%

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        Expanded lethal means counseling in primary care after a positive suicide screening may help improve clinical suicide prevention practices. https://t.co/u7mHIM3b1L https://t.co/PkdGuCQXeX

    • Mashup Score: 3
      The Importance of Autonomy and Performance Goals in Perceived Workload Among Behavioral Health Providers - 1 year(s) ago

      Objective: The authors sought to assess workplace characteristics associated with perceived reasonable workload among behavioral health care providers in the Veterans Health Administration. Methods: The authors evaluated perceived reasonable workload and workplace characteristics from the 2019 All Employee Survey (AES; N=14,824) and 2019 Mental Health Provider Survey (MHPS; N=10,490) and facility-level staffing ratios from Mental Health Onboard Clinical Dashboard data. Nine AES and 15 MHPS workplace predictors of perceived reasonable workload, 11 AES and six MHPS demographic predictors, and facility-level staffing ratios were included in mixed-effects logistic regression models. Results: In total, 8,874 (59.9%) AES respondents and 5,915 (56.4%) MHPS respondents reported having a reasonable workload. The characteristics most strongly associated with perceived reasonable workload were having attainable performance goals (average marginal effect [AME]=0.10) in the AES and ability to sched

      Source: ps.psychiatryonline.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Psychiatry
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AmJPsychiatry
        AmJPsychiatry

        Feasible performance goals and autonomy in scheduling were associated with perceived reasonable workload among behavioral health providers in the VHA @kzivin https://t.co/RXQBYAsEr4 https://t.co/fxRrCrunrr

    Load More
    ASCO 2025

    Advertisement

    Advertisement

    MashupMD
    © 2025 - Mashup Media LLC
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Settings