Behavioral Health

The case for behavioral health integration into primary care

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

The improvement associated with collaborative care is clinically meaningful to patients and physicians. In one RCT, collaborative care doubled response rates of depression treatment compared with usual care.3 Quality improvement data from real-world implementation of collaborative care programs suggests that similar outcomes can be achieved in a variety of settings.30

COST BENEFITS OF CCM

Collaborative care for depression is associated with lower health care costs.29,31

Patients with diabetes managed collaboratively have shown HbA1c decreases of ≥ 1% from baseline more frequently than usual-care patients.

A meta-analysis of 57 RCTs in 2012 showed that CCM improves depression outcomes across populations, settings, and outcome domains, and that these results are achieved at little to no increase in treatment costs compared with usual care (Cohen’s d = 0.05; 95% CI, –0.02–0.12).26

When collaborative care was compared with routine care in an RCT involving 1801 primary care patients ≥ 60 years who were suffering from depression, a cost saving of $3363 per patient over 4 years was demonstrated in the intervention arm.31

A technical analysis of 94 RCTs in 2015 concluded that CCM is cost effective compared with usual care, with a range of $15,000 to $80,000 per quality-adjusted life year gained. These studies also indicated that organizations’ costs to implement CCM increase in the short term. Based on this analysis, organizations would need to invest between $3 to $22 per patient per month to implement and sustain CCMs, depending on the prevalence of depression in the population.29

Continue to: OTHER MODELS OF BHI

Pages

Recommended Reading

Children’s book effectively assesses literary skills during well-child visits
MDedge Family Medicine
Synthetic drugs pose regulatory, diagnostic challenges
MDedge Family Medicine
Hazardous cannabis use in MS linked to anxiety, depression
MDedge Family Medicine
Children’s anxiety during asthma exacerbations linked to better outcomes
MDedge Family Medicine
Ketamine tied to remission from suicidal ideation
MDedge Family Medicine
Weight-based teasing may mean further weight gain in children
MDedge Family Medicine
Increasingly violent storms may strain mental health
MDedge Family Medicine
Mismatch and repair technique adapted for autism
MDedge Family Medicine
Estimated prevalence of OSA in the Americas stands at 170 million
MDedge Family Medicine
Gun ownership practices linked to soldier suicide risk
MDedge Family Medicine