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Bridging the Behavioral Health Gap in Serious Illness Care: Challenges and Strategies for Workforce Development

Shalev, Daniel; Docherty, Mary; Spaeth-Rublee, Brigitta; Khauli, Nicole; Cheung, Stephanie; Levenson, Jon; Pincus, Harold Alan
Comorbidity with behavioral health conditions is highly prevalent among those experiencing serious medical illnesses and is associated with poor outcomes. Siloed provision of behavioral and physical healthcare has contributed to a workforce ill-equipped to address the often complex needs of these clinical populations. Trained specialist behavioral health providers are scarce and there are gaps in core behavioral health competencies among serious illness care providers. Core competency frameworks to close behavioral health training gaps in primary care exist, but these have not extended to some of the distinct skills and roles required in serious illness care settings. This paper seeks to address this issue by describing a common framework of training competencies across the full spectrum of clinical responsibility and behavioral health expertise for those working at the interface of behavioral health and serious illness care. The authors used a mixed-method approach to develop a model of behavioral health and serious illness care and to delineate seven core skill domains necessary for practitioners working at this interface. Existing opportunities for scaling-up the workforce as well as priority policy recommendation to address barriers to implementation are discussed.
PMID: 31611044
ISSN: 1545-7214
CID: 5250082

A Model to Improve Behavioral Health Integration into Serious Illness Care

Cheung, Stephanie; Spaeth-Rublee, Brigitta; Shalev, Daniel; Li, Mingjie; Docherty, Mary; Levenson, Jon; Pincus, Harold Alan
Behavioral health problems are highly prevalent among people with serious medical illness. Individuals living with these comorbidities have complex clinical and social needs yet face siloed care, high health care costs, and poor outcomes. Interacting factors contribute to these inequalities including historical separation of behavioral and physical health provision. Several care models for integrating behavioral health and general medical care have been developed and tested, but the evidence base focuses primarily on primary care populations and settings. This article advances that work by proposing a Behavioral Health-Serious Illness Care model. Developed through a mixed methods approach combining literature review, surveys, interviews, and input from an expert advisory panel, it provides a conceptual framework of building blocks for behavioral health integration tailored to serious illness care populations and the range of settings in which they receive care. The model is intended to serve as foundation to support the development and implementation of integrated behavioral health and serious illness care. The key components of the model are described, barriers to implementation discussed, and recommendations for policy approaches to address these barriers presented.
PMID: 31175941
ISSN: 1873-6513
CID: 5250072

Systematic Review of Gut Microbiota and Major Depression

Cheung, Stephanie G; Goldenthal, Ariel R; Uhlemann, Anne-Catrin; Mann, J John; Miller, Jeffrey M; Sublette, M Elizabeth
PMCID:6378305
PMID: 30804820
ISSN: 1664-0640
CID: 5250062

Mental Health and Serious Illness Care

Pincus, Harold Alan; Shalev, Daniel; Spaeth-Rublee, Brigitta; Cheung, Stephanie; Li, Mingjie; Levenson, Jon
[S.l.] : Gordon & Betty Moore Foundation, 2018
Extent: 62 p.
ISBN: n/a
CID: 5253612

"What We Have Here is a Failure to Communicate": Association of Preferred Language With the Rate of Psychiatric Consultation

Cheung, Stephanie G; Mishkin, Adrienne D; Shapiro, Peter A
BACKGROUND:In the United States, people with limited English proficiency (LEP) receive poorer medical care than those proficient in English. Few studies demonstrate how linguistic barriers complicate psychiatric care; in consultation-liaison (C-L) psychiatry, there are no published data about care disparities for patients with LEP or for whom English is not the preferred language (PL). OBJECTIVE:We sought to determine if PL affects the psychiatric consultation rate. METHODS:Among adult patients admitted during 1 year to a large urban academic medical center, we compared psychiatric consultation rates in English PL patients with non-English PL patients. PL was ascertained from demographics during the medical record. The occurrence of psychiatric consultation was ascertained from C-L service logs. RESULTS:= 98.78, p < 0.0001). CONCLUSION:Primary teams requested more consultations for patients whose PL was English than for patients with other PLs, suggesting that psychiatric needs of patients with non-English PL may be unaddressed. This is the first study to demonstrate a disproportionately low rate of general hospital psychiatric consultations in this population. Further study is necessary to confirm and understand this disparity. We recommend routine use of professional interpreters and low threshold for consultation in patients with non-English PL.
PMID: 28413091
ISSN: 1545-7206
CID: 5250152

Hold that thought : the ins and outs of LPS holds

Cheung, Stephanie; Frankel, Steven
ORIGINAL:0015634
ISSN: 0890-0302
CID: 5253592