Integrated Primary Care : A Systematic Review of Study Design and Program Characteristics

ECU Author/Contributor (non-ECU co-authors, if there are any, appear on document)
Matthew Perry Martin (Creator)
Institution
East Carolina University (ECU )
Web Site: http://www.ecu.edu/lib/
Advisor
Mark White

Abstract: Integrated primary care (IPC) the integration of medical and behavioral health professionals is a viable part of the solution for the United States' fragmented health care delivery system. Over the past decade or so efforts have been made to examine the theory behind and effectiveness of this health care framework. As researchers and program developers continue to examine the impact of IPC on patient populations it is becoming increasingly important to highlight the study design and program characteristic trends of IPC to ascertain the next steps in research development. This researcher sought to identify those trends by using a systematic review design to examine studies of IPC. Of the two systematic reviews conducted for this dissertation the first review includes information from 112 articles regarding study design sampling procedure patient population characteristics treatment outcome geographical setting and psychosocial measurement. The findings of this review indicate that a majority of researchers examined depression outcomes using experimental designs and that the average participant in such studies was a Caucasian female in her early 50s. Moreover the researcher found that almost none of the IPC programs were oriented towards family systems. For the second systematic review the researcher extracted data from 76 of the 112 articles to examine the characteristics of each IPC program including communication practices models interventions provider type training and supervision practices and setting. Findings from this review show that most IPC programs include psychoeducation medication follow-up contacts psychotherapy and at least one care management strategy as part of treatment but that less than half of researchers are reporting communication between providers and even fewer are reporting collaboration practices. Moreover the findings indicate that a third of researchers trained and/or supervised behavioral health providers to work in an IPC program and a fourth recruited nurses as behavioral health providers. Suggestions for future research include more diverse research methods and patient populations as well as a focus on increasing communication and collaboration between providers. 

Additional Information

Publication
Dissertation
Date: 2013
Keywords
Mental health, Behavioral sciences, Behavioral Health, Collaborative care, Integrated Primary Care, Systematic Review
Subjects
Integrated delivery of health care--United States
Primary care (Medicine)--United States
Mental health services--United States

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Integrated Primary Care : A Systematic Review of Study Design and Program Characteristicshttp://hdl.handle.net/10342/4106The described resource references, cites, or otherwise points to the related resource.