Creative strategies improve
medical care for mentally ill
Newswise — A new review of studies
found few documented attempts, but encouraging results in the effort
to improve the health and medical care of patients with mental
illness.
An array of health interventions —
such as providing medical evaluations at a methadone clinic — proved
successful in reaching patients who might otherwise fall through the
cracks.
“The main news is that these
programs can be effective, that they can improve quality of primary
care, that they actually improve health for these patients and that
they can do so at a modest cost,” said lead researcher Benjamin G.
Druss.
Druss is a psychiatrist-internist
with Emory University’s Rollins School of Public Health. His team
found six trials rigorous enough to include in the review.
The five studies that reported on
medical quality all found significant improvement for patients in
the intervention groups compared with patients that received usual
care.
The limited amount of research on
the issue is also news.
Druss said many studies have found
that people with serious mental illness are vulnerable to receiving
inadequate medical care. Earlier research shows that America’s
mental health population has elevated rates of some disease and
health complications from psychiatric medication, while patients
tend to die at younger ages.
But the Emory review shows that
few studies have taken the next step to uncover workable strategies
to buffer the physical health of patients with behavior disorders,
Druss said.
The review in the current edition
of General Hospital Psychiatry combines data for about 1,500
patients. Most study participants were diagnosed with
substance-abuse problems, while some suffered serious mental
illness.
One trial provided medical
evaluations at a methadone clinic, while another assembled a team of
physicians and nurses to care for patients in a detox program. In
one study, health workers facilitated care referrals by contacting
patients’ primary care physicians to set up appointments. At one
inpatient psychiatric unit, study patients were examined by a
consulting internist, while other patients received usual care from
the house psychiatric staff.
“When you are doing a system-type
intervention — as opposed to a medication — it’s very important to
tailor it to the local system,” Druss said. “The approach that will
be most effective will depend on the system you are treating
patients in.”
Stephen R. Marder, M.D., said the
awareness surrounding the medical vulnerability of people with
mental illness has not been widely translated into better medical
monitoring. Marder said he’s not sure if mental-health providers are
taking more responsibility for addressing the need.
But, the U.S. Veterans Affairs
health system is an exception and innovator on the issue, according
to Marder, a professor of psychiatry the Semel Institute for
Neuroscience at the University of California Los Angeles.
“The VA has a particular focus
these years in improving the quality of care. So there are some
things happening,” said Marder, who was not involved in the Emory
review.
Two of the studies reviewed by the
Emory team were conduced at VA facilities.