Mental Health Consult

Teamwork, Part 3: How much of the burden can primary care physicians shoulder?


 

References

Primary care physicians have the potential to detect “distress” diagnoses and mental or behavioral disorders in most patients who come to the office, noted Dr. Lawrence “Bopper” Deyton, senior associate dean for clinical public health and professor of medicine and health policy at George Washington University.

If one embraces the Acceptable Care Act’s priorities of improving quality of care, reducing cost, and improving patient satisfaction, “Aren’t we at the cusp of a reimbursement system that should reward for that?” he asks.

Kennedy Forum policy director Lauren Alfred says there’s only so much that can be done. “Then at some point, we have to talk about collaborative care ... and where we’re going to bring specialists into the equation.”

In this video, Dr. Deyton and Ms. Alfred discuss how much mental health care primary care physicians should be asked to shoulder – and when such care should be more collaborative.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

FDA approves Adzenys XR-ODT for ADHD
MDedge Psychiatry
In adolescents, treat substance use disorder before ADHD
MDedge Psychiatry
Axis I psychiatric disorders high in skin-restricted lupus patients
MDedge Psychiatry
Follow-up care for adolescent depression is inadequate
MDedge Psychiatry
Later-life weight loss signals coming mild cognitive impairment
MDedge Psychiatry
Lifetime use of pot affects verbal memory in middle-aged adults
MDedge Psychiatry
Growing ADHD drug selection aids individualized therapy
MDedge Psychiatry
Anxiety is poorly recognized, treated in children
MDedge Psychiatry
Try behavioral therapies first, then melatonin for pediatric insomnia
MDedge Psychiatry
FDA panel backs Brintellix for cognitive dysfunction in depression
MDedge Psychiatry