Innovation summary

There simply aren’t enough mental health specialists to provide effective care to everyone in need. Even in the United States, only 1 in 10 adults with a mental health problem sees a psychiatrist in any given year, and that number drops dramatically in many parts of the world.

Telehealth can improve access to specialty consultation for patients with common mental disorders or substance abuse by linking specialists at academic or regional health centers with healthcare providers in underserved areas. Compared to in-person care, most studies have shown telepsychiatry to be reliable in diagnosing and treating an array of conditions across the age span from children to the elderly.

Impact summary

  • Psychiatric telehealth consultations in primary care have had an enormous impact on reaching patients with mental health disorders when part of a Collaborative Care initiative
  • In Washington State's Mental Health Integration Program (MHIP) alone, consulting psychiatrists in 2011 provided more than 10,000 telephonic case reviews and treatment recommendations for patients with mental disorders, chronic pain, and/or substance abuse disorders throughout the state of Washington
  • The cost is similar to seeing a patient face to face, but is cost-effective as it requires less personnel

"Telehealth supports primary care providers by reducing provider isolation, allowing them to provide mental health care in their clinics rather than sending patients to a distant mental health center, and by providing an opportunity to learn how to treat patients by participating in consultations and receiving case management support."

 

- Jurgen Unutzer

Innovation details

Rural communities are severely disadvantaged by limited or non-existent access to psychiatric specialists. This lack of mental health services leads to under-treatment, higher rates of suicide, increased use of emergency services, and hospitalizations. Compounding the problems related to inadequate access to mental health care, primary care providers in rural areas report having inadequate skills to manage mental health problems, especially serious psychiatric disorders and conditions aggravated by co-occurring substance abuse.

In MHIP, psychiatrists use telehealth to consult with patients but also to consult with primary care providers and care managers in the context of Collaborative Care. Collaborative Care is a population-focused approach to treating mental health problems that leverages the small number of mental health professionals that exist. Staff responsibilities are as follows:

  • The psychiatric consultant typically speaks with a care manager in a remote primary care clinic weekly to review the treatment plan for patients who are new or who are not improving as expected
  • The psychiatric consultant may suggest treatment modifications for the primary care provider to consider, recommend the primary care provider see the patient for an in-person consultation, or consult on patients who are clinically challenging or who need specialty mental health services
  • The psychiatric consultant most often uses the telephone for consultation, but also uses televideo when seeing the patient, provider, or care manager makes sense
  • The psychiatric consultant is available to the care manager and the primary care provider during business hours for ad hoc consultation as needed

In the Mental Health and Opioid/Pain Management Consultation project, psychiatrists support and collaborate with rural healthcare providers using telehealth-based specialty consultations and provider/patient education for patients with common mental disorders or opioid abuse. Services include:

  • Video teleconferenced patient evaluations
  • Recommendations to patients’ local primary care providers
  • Systematic caseload supervision
  • Access to an array of educational offerings via video teleconferencing

Telehealth supports primary care providers by reducing provider isolation, allowing them to provide mental health care in their clinics rather than sending patients to a distant mental health center, and by providing an opportunity to learn how to treat patients by participating in consultations and receiving case management support. Telehealth can also provide training opportunities for developing a workforce of people who can effectively treat common mental health disorders.

Key drivers

Team work

In order for telehealth psychiatry to succeed in the context of Collaborative Care, it is extremely important that all members of the care team understand their roles and how these relate to the other care team members’ roles

Efficient communication

Case reviews and recommendations to primary care providers in remote areas from psychiatric consultants using telehealth have been well received and are an effective way to teach and increase the skills and capacity of primary care providers in treating common mental health problems

Challenges

Adapting innovation

Teaching psychiatrists to operate at a population-level using remote techniques rather than traditional one-on-one, face-to-face visits was a challenge at first, but once the psychiatrists became used to the system it was a success

Continuation

  • Remote consultation via telehealth technologies has been implemented in several state-wide programs reaching up to 35,000 patients through Washington State’s Mental Health Integration Program (MHIP)
  • We plan to further expand our reach and capacity using telehealth technologies and to explore the use of video for teaching and supervising trainees and providers at remote sites

Partners

Funders

Evaluation methods

Psychiatric consultations via telehealth to primary care providers, care managers, and patients is central to Collaborative Care; more than 80 randomized controlled trials have shown Collaborative Care to be more effective than usual care and its ability to achieve the Triple Aim of improved patient care experiences, better clinical outcomes, and lower health care costs.

Cost of implementation

A video-supported consultation with a psychiatrist has roughly similar costs to an in-person visit plus relatively minor costs to support web-based video technology.

Impact details

  • In the MHIP program alone, consulting psychiatrists in 2011 provided more than 10,000 telephonic case reviews and treatment recommendations for patients with mental disorders, chronic pain, and/or substance abuse disorders throughout the state of Washington

Comments

On behalf of the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, www.adaa.org, we are pleased that you are discussing this critical issue. Susan Gurley
How useful did you find this content?: 
0
Your rating: None
5
Average: 5 (1 vote)
Log in or become a member to contribute to the discussion.

Submit your innovation

Create your own page to tell the MHIN community about your innovation.

Country

United States of America

Gallery

Similar content