Connections to Primary Medical Care after Psychiatric Crisis
http://www.100md.com
《家庭医学美国版》
Department of Family Medicine, Family Medicine Research Institute, The State University of New York at Buffalo (KSG, TJS, PAP, SJS, CW, MS, MT), Buffalo
Research Institute on Addictions, Buffalo (KEL)
Abstract
Background: Patients presenting with a psychiatric emergency face a unique set of challenges in connecting to primary care.
Objectives: We tested the hypothesis that, in contrast to usual care, case management will result in higher rates of connection to primary care. We examined variables affecting primary care entry, including insurance status, hospital admission, and concurrent linkages to mental health care.
Research Design/Methods: This article reports on a preliminary outcome of an ongoing randomized controlled trial conducted with 101 patients presenting in an urban psychiatric setting. Patients were randomized to a case management team or to usual care. The need for medical care was assessed by documenting medical comorbidity.
Results: Average age of the sample was 37.5; 65% were male, and 78% had low income; 37% were African American and 9% were Hispanic. Within 3 months of study enrollment, 57% of the intervention group was successfully linked to primary care compared with 16% of the usual care group, a difference that was statistically significant (P < .001). Associated positive predictors for linkage to primary care included mental health care visits and success in obtaining health insurance. Inpatient hospital stay at the time of psychiatric crisis was negatively associated with later attendance at primary care.
Conclusions: Case management intervention was effective in establishing linkage to primary care within 3 months. Ongoing work will evaluate primary care retention and physical and mental health outcomes.
Patients with significant psychiatric disorders are likely to have concomitant medical problems.1 Persons who need psychiatric care also need general medical care, and those with severe mental disorders suffer excess morbidity and mortality compared with the general population.2
Integrated medical care for persons with psychiatric illness makes a positive difference in health care quality and outcomes.3 So far, efforts to integrate mental and physical health care have focused on patients appearing in a primary care setting.4,5 However, many patients with coexisting physical and mental health problems fail to appear in primary health care systems, increasing the risk of poorer health outcomes. Barriers to accessing primary care include inadequate skills or experience to negotiate the health care system, poor support networks, and transportation difficulties.6 Homeless persons, approximately one third of whom may have a chronic mental illness, are at a particular disadvantage. Often, they are without insurance and find it difficult to navigate the service system.7 This study addresses one such set of particularly vulnerable and underserved patients—those presenting to the emergency department in psychiatric crisis.
Case management approaches in the community and collaborative efforts such as "stepped care" have yielded improved outcomes for patients with depression, suggesting that many patients with psychiatric problems can be managed effectively within primary care practices.8–10,11 Moreover, there is evidence that homeless persons can be identified and linked to physical health care and obtain appropriate treatment of mental illness and substance use.12
However, getting connected to the doctor may pose a problem for the patient emerging from psychiatric crisis, and simply providing to patients the name of a primary care provider or site does not seem to result in effective linkage.13 An opportune time for connection to and engagement in a primary care setting may be after a psychiatric crisis. This point may serve as an opportunity to initiate linkages between medical and mental health services, bridging the gap between mental health and primary care and initiating care continuity in both settings.
This study focuses on patients without a primary care "home" emerging from psychiatric crisis, comparing facilitated linkage with primary medical care with standard practice after a psychiatric emergency visit. We test the hypothesis that, in contrast to usual care, community-based care management will result in higher rates of connection to primary care. The study also examines variables that may facilitate or deter primary care entry, including insurance status, whether patients were admitted to the hospital at the time of psychiatric crisis, and linkages to community mental health care.
Methods
This article reports preliminary results on the rate of linkage to primary care within 3 months as part of an ongoing randomized control trial. So far, 101 patients have been enrolled and are being observed for 1 year. Patients present at an urban Comprehensive Psychiatric Emergency Program (CPEP). CPEP is accessible 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Eligibility criteria for the study require that persons be older than 18 years and have a DSM-IV-R–defined Axis I disorder.14 Patients are eligible if they either have no regular source of primary care or have not seen a primary care provider within 6 months. "Primary care provider" is defined as a clinician with whom the patient has an ongoing relationship on a regular basis. Patients are ineligible if deemed unstable, actively suicidal or homicidal, or unable to give informed consent. In the case of patients being admitted for stabilization, they are eligible for enrollment once stabilized and ready for discharge. The prospective follow-up occurs from the point of discharge. The study is approved through our University’s Institutional Review Board.
Usual Care
Services routinely offered through CPEP include complete psychiatric assessment and management, targeted therapeutic approaches, and linkages to community mental health services. Referral to primary medical care is provided on patient request or if a significant medical condition is identified in the emergency ward. Uninsured patients are given on-site assistance with health coverage. All patients receive needed medications.
Study Intervention
Care managers meet with intervention patients on study enrollment, within the first week of facilitation and routinely at primary care appointments. They maintain regular contact through face-to-face visits, and by phone. They also provide the following case-based assistance in regular meetings:
Information regarding sliding scale or "free" primary medical care sites.
Facilitation of access to primary care, with shared decision-making regarding primary care site location, provider preference, and travel routes.
Reinforce patient education and teaching that occurs at primary care visits.
Index cards for primary care providers with psychiatric hospital discharge diagnosis, pharmacotherapy, and mental health treatment site referral.
Follow-up, including home visits and mobile outreach when appropriate.
Assistance through peer connections to community mental health sites and social services.
Process
The CPEP patient logs are screened on a daily basis to determine patient eligibility. Those patients who meet the eligibility criteria are approached by a member of the research team and invited to join the study. Those patients who agree are given a series of baseline assessments and randomized to either the intervention group or the usual care group. The research team contacts both intervention and control groups on a monthly basis, tracking primary care utilization, insurance status, and mental health visits.
Outcome and Associated Variables
The primary outcome of interest for this article was the relative connection rate to primary care for each study group. "Connection" to primary care was defined as a completed visit within 3 months of study entry. This definition was based on criteria currently used for measuring quality of access to care by behavioral organizations.15 In pilot work for this study, even those patients without medical insurance completed a first visit within this time frame.
Associated variables of interest included investigating how other factors such as inpatient admission, insurance status, and linkage to mental health services related to successful primary care linkage within the specified time frame. Moreover, the rate of linkage for those persons with chronic disease, arguably those most in need of primary care, was of special interest.
Analysis
Basic descriptive statistics were used to characterize the participants in the usual care and intervention groups with regard to demographics and psychiatric and medical diagnosis. 2 tests were used to ascertain the relationship between the categorical variables of interest and the dichotomous outcome variable (linkage to primary care within 3 months of study enrollment). Odds ratios were calculated where appropriate. Variables of interest were condition (intervention versus usual care), insurance status at baseline and at 3 months from enrollment, linkage to mental health services before entering CPEP and at 3 months after enrollment, psychiatric diagnosis, medical diagnosis, and hospital status at the time of enrollment (regardless of whether the participant was admitted to the inpatient psychiatric ward).
Thereafter, variables with a statistically significant bivariate relationship with linkage to primary care were entered into a logistic regression model. Odds ratios from the final logistic regression analysis were examined to determine the association between each of the variables in the model and the outcome variable, controlling for the other predictors.
Results
Sample Characteristics
The demographic and diagnostic characteristics of participants in the intervention and usual care groups are presented in Table 1. As a result of randomization, the distributions of these variables were very well balanced across the intervention and usual care groups, suggesting that the 2 groups of participants were largely equivalent across several important dimensions. The average age of participants was relatively young (37 years), and both groups had a majority of male participants. Although the gender presentation to the psychiatric emergency ward was equal, more men presented without a designated primary care physician. Minority participation in the study was high, accounting for approximately 50% of the sample. Nearly 70% of subjects were unemployed, and approximately 80% had incomes below $10,000 per year. Most participants in both groups had either completed high school or had earned an equivalency diploma.
Within the sample as a whole, there was a wide diversity of psychiatric diagnoses; however, there were no significant group differences at baseline. The most common diagnoses of study participants fell under the umbrella of mood (primarily Major Depression), psychotic (Schizophrenia and Schizoaffective Disorder), and substance use disorders. A substantial portion of participants (36%) was diagnosed with both a substance use disorder and another Axis I disorder.
In addition to the aforementioned psychiatric disabilities, nearly half of the study participants suffered from one or more medical comorbidities—despite their relatively young average age (37 years). Many of these medical comorbidities were chronic conditions, including diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, arthritis, and asthma. The presence of medical comorbidity to such an extent provided further evidence of the necessity for and potential benefit of prompt linkage to primary care for study participants.
Linkage to Primary Care
A summary of the statistically significant results from the subsequent bivariate relationships is displayed in Table 2.
Condition
There was a significant relationship between condition (intervention versus usual care) and successful linkage to primary care within 3 months of enrollment in the study. Whereas 57% participants in the intervention group were successfully linked, only 16% of the usual care group completed a primary care visit within the critical time period. This relationship is statistically significant 2 (1) = 18.21, P < .001; odds ratio (OR) = 7.24 (95% CI = 2.76 to 18.99). It is arguable that it is most important for those with a medical comorbidity to obtain linkage to primary medical care. More than half (54%) of these patients were linked to primary care within 3 months.
Insurance
At baseline, there was no difference in rates of insurance coverage between groups. Approximately 48% of both the intervention and control groups had some form of insurance coverage; the vast majority who had insurance were publicly insured (Medicaid). At the 3-month follow-up point, 78% of the usual care and 86% of the intervention group had managed to obtain insurance coverage. Although there was no relationship between baseline insurance status and linkage to primary care, there was a relationship between insurance status at 3-month follow-up and linkage. In particular, 45% of those who were insured at the 3-month time point were linked to primary care compared with only 11% of those without insurance [2 (1) = 6.99, P = .008; OR = 6.44 (95% CI = 1.39 to 29.79)].
Inpatient Status
Approximately 55% of the sample required inpatient hospitalization after the psychiatric crisis and entry to CPEP. Those enrolled from the inpatient ward comprised approximately equal portions of both the intervention and usual care groups (58% of usual care and 52% of intervention). Requiring inpatient hospitalization at the time of psychiatric crisis may serve as a proxy for the severity of the crisis and may, in turn, relate to subsequent participation in primary care. Of those persons who were hospitalized at the time of psychiatric crisis, only 27% were linked to primary care, whereas 52% of those with routine discharges from CPEP obtained linkage. This relationship was statistically significant [2 (1) = 6.55, P = .01; OR = 0.34 (95% CI = 0.15 to 0.79)].
Linkage to Mental Health Services
Approximately half of the participants in both the intervention and usual care groups were linked to mental health services before psychiatric crisis and subsequent enrollment in the current study. Three months after enrollment in the study, approximately 46% of the usual care group and 53% of the intervention group reported linkage to mental health services. Although there was not a significant relationship between mental health linkage before crisis and linkage to primary care, a significant relationship did emerge for mental health linkage at the 3-month time point [2 (1) = 6.66, P = .01; OR = 3.29 (95% CI = 1.30 to 8.30)]. Forty-eight percent of those linked to mental health services were also linked to primary care, whereas only 22% of those not linked to mental health services obtained linkage to primary care.
Diagnostic Variables
There were no significant relationships between psychiatric diagnosis or medical diagnosis and linkage to primary care.
Logistic Regression
To create a more comprehensive preliminary model for predicting linkage to primary care, all 4 of the variables listed in Table 2 were entered into a logistic regression. The model yielded a Cox and Snell R2 of 0.35 and a Nagelkerke R2 of 0.47. Controlling for each of the other predictors in the model, all 4 variables remained statistically significant predictors of linkage to primary care.
Of most interest perhaps for the current study is that participation in the intervention group was a significant predictor of linkage to primary care even when controlling for insurance status, linkage to mental health, and inpatient status at the time of psychiatric crisis. Adjusted odds ratios and other relevant statistics from the logistic regression analysis are displayed in Table 3.
Discussion
In this study of 101 persons, the primary outcome of successful connection to primary medical care after psychiatric crisis was significantly more likely for patients who had community case managers, relative to control subjects. In earlier studies, active linkage after psychiatric crisis improved function16 and increased adherence to mental health care.17
Nurse case management of persons with serious psychiatric disabilities is feasible and effective in both community and primary care office settings.18 We found that care managers and case-based interventions had a significant positive influence on attendance at primary care. This may speak to a "structured system" approach, as identified through focus groups discussing the management of crisis in mental illness.19
We concentrated on 3 variables of interest that may have had an association with our primary outcome measure. In all 3 circumstances, intervention and control groups had no significant differences at baseline.
Although initial insurance status was not associated with primary care linkage, obtaining insurance within 3 months of psychiatric crisis seemed to correlate with successful primary care attendance. Persons reporting mental disorders are twice as likely to report being denied medical insurance because of a pre-existing condition, and even those with insurance may delay medical care because of inadequate coverage or access difficulties.20,21 Although we did not look specifically at insurance type in this study, differences in health coverage may affect primary and mental health care access. There is a need for further investigation of how health insurance patterns influence care attendance and continuity.
Patients who accessed community mental health care were more likely to attend primary care. An earlier study22 found that for patients discharged after psychiatric emergency, use of care plans emphasizing liaisons with mental health and primary care led to decreased emergency department visits.
Inpatient hospitalization had a negative effect on initial linkage to primary medical care in this analysis. Although there was no significant relationship between actual diagnosis and linkage, diagnostic severity or other factors not identified in this study, such as homelessness, may serve as barriers to primary care entry.
This study has several limitations. Although linkage within 3 months was achieved through case management, this time frame is obviously inadequate to assess adherence to care. At the completion of the study, data on changes over time and downstream effects subsequent to primary care linkage will be described. Furthermore, although there is information on mental health visits, care managers did not explicitly provide assistance with integration of mental health and primary care. This makes it difficult to assess in this study whether features within the primary care setting influence mental health care. Finally, the circumstances surrounding inpatient admission need to be explored and further evaluated with regard to primary care attendance.
Community case management did make a significant difference in primary care entry for persons without a primary care provider. Having a regular doctor can make a positive difference on access to primary care and lead to improvement in chronic care conditions.23,24 On-going work must elucidate whether patients adhere to care, and whether a mental health-primary care connection results in improvement in health, functional status, and quality of life.
Linking patients from psychiatric crisis to a primary care home demonstrates one process of care and coverage for a vulnerable population. Research in this area may have long-term implications for better care and public health policy by identifying the features surrounding access to primary care that may improve outcomes for patients with mental disorders.
Acknowledgments
We gratefully acknowledge the expert assistance of Angela Henke in the preparation of the manuscript.
Notes
This study was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Generalist Physician’s Scholarship Program, the Erie County Department of Mental Health, and the Department of Family Medicine, State University of New York at Buffalo.
References
deGruy FV, 3rd. Mental health care in the primary setting. In: Donaldson M, Yordy K, Kohr K, Vanselow N, editors. Primary care: America’s health in a new era: Washington DC: National Academy Press; 1996. p. 285–311.
Dixon L, Postrado L, Delahanty J, Fischer PJ, Lehman A. The association of medical comorbidity in schizophrenia with poor physical and mental health. J Nerv Ment Dis 1999; 187: 496–502.
Druss BG, Rohrbaugh RM, Levinson CM, Rosenheck RA. Integrated medical care for patients with serious psychiatric illness: a randomized trial. Arch Gen Psychiatry 2001; 58: 861–8.
Bower P, Sibbald B. Systematic review of the effect of on-site mental health professionals on the clinical behaviour of general practitioners. BMJ 2000; 320: 614–17.
Mauksch LB, Tucker SM, Katon WJ, et al. Mental illness, functional impairment, and patient preferences for collaborative care in an uninsured, primary care population. J Fam Pract 2001; 50: 41–7.
Felker B, Yazel JJ, Short D. Mortality and medical comorbidity among psychiatric patients: a review. Psychiatr Serv 1996; 47: 1356–63.
Wolff N, Helminiak TW, Morse GA, Calsyn RJ, Klinkenberg WD, Trusty ML. Cost-effectiveness evaluation of three approaches to case management for homeless mentally ill clients. Am J Psychiatry 1997; 154: 341–8.
Katon W, Von Korff M, Lin E, et al. Collaborative management to achieve depression treatment guidelines. J Clin Psychiatry 1997; 58(Suppl 1): 20–23.
Katon W, Von Korff M, Lin E, et al. Stepped collaborative care for primary care patients with persistent symptoms of depression: a randomized trial. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1999; 56: 1109–15.
Valenstein M, Klinkman M, Becker S, et al. Concurrent treatment of patients with depression in the community: provider practices, attitudes, and barriers to collaboration. J Fam Pract 1999; 48: 180–7.
Klinkman MS, Okkes I. Mental health problems in primary care: a research agenda. J Fam Pract 1998; 47: 379–84.
Gelberg L, Andersen RM, Leake BD. The behavioral model for vulnerable populations: application to medical care use and outcomes for homeless people. Health Serv Res 2000; 34: 1273–1302.
Diamant AL, Brook RH, Fink A, Gelberg L. Assessing use of primary health care services by very low income adults in a managed care program. Arch Intern Med. 2001; 161: 1222–7.
American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical manual of psychiatric disorders. 4th ed revised. Washington DC: American Psychiatric Association; 1994.
Jones W, Elwyn G, Edwards P, Edwards A, Emmerson M, Hibbs R. Measuring access to primary care appointments: a review of methods. BMC Fam Pract [serial online] 2003; 4: 8.
Bernstein E, Bernstein J, Levenson S. Project ASSERT: an ED-based intervention to increase access to primary care, preventive services, and the substance abuse treatment system. Ann Emerg Med 1997; 30: 181–9.
Klinkenberg WD, Calsyn RJ. Predictors of receiving aftercare 1, 3, and 18 months after a psychiatric emergency room visit. Psychiatr Q 1999; 70: 39–51.
Rabins PV, Black BS, Roca R, et al. Effectiveness of a nurse-based outreach program for identifying and treating psychiatric illness in the elderly. JAMA 2000; 283: 2802–9.
Lester H, Tritter JQ, Sorohan H. Managing crisis: the role of primary care for people with serious mental illness. Fam Med 2004; 36: 28–34.
Druss BG, Rosenheck RA. Mental disorders and access to medical care in the United States. Am J Psychiatry 1998; 155: 1775–7.
Michels R. Improving outpatient psychiatric care. N Engl J Med 1997; 336: 578–9.
Pope D, Fernandes CM, Bouthillette F, Etherington J. Frequent users of the emergency department: a program to improve care and reduce visits. Can Med Assoc J 2000; 162: 1017–20.
Lambrew JM, DeFriese GH, Carey TS, Ricketts TC, Biddle AK. The effects of having a regular doctor on access to primary care. Med Care 1996; 34: 138–51.
Santiago JM, McCall-Perez F, Bachrach LL. Integrated services for chronic mental patients: theoretical perspective and experimental results. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 1985; 7: 309–15.(Kim S. Griswold, MD, MPH,)
Research Institute on Addictions, Buffalo (KEL)
Abstract
Background: Patients presenting with a psychiatric emergency face a unique set of challenges in connecting to primary care.
Objectives: We tested the hypothesis that, in contrast to usual care, case management will result in higher rates of connection to primary care. We examined variables affecting primary care entry, including insurance status, hospital admission, and concurrent linkages to mental health care.
Research Design/Methods: This article reports on a preliminary outcome of an ongoing randomized controlled trial conducted with 101 patients presenting in an urban psychiatric setting. Patients were randomized to a case management team or to usual care. The need for medical care was assessed by documenting medical comorbidity.
Results: Average age of the sample was 37.5; 65% were male, and 78% had low income; 37% were African American and 9% were Hispanic. Within 3 months of study enrollment, 57% of the intervention group was successfully linked to primary care compared with 16% of the usual care group, a difference that was statistically significant (P < .001). Associated positive predictors for linkage to primary care included mental health care visits and success in obtaining health insurance. Inpatient hospital stay at the time of psychiatric crisis was negatively associated with later attendance at primary care.
Conclusions: Case management intervention was effective in establishing linkage to primary care within 3 months. Ongoing work will evaluate primary care retention and physical and mental health outcomes.
Patients with significant psychiatric disorders are likely to have concomitant medical problems.1 Persons who need psychiatric care also need general medical care, and those with severe mental disorders suffer excess morbidity and mortality compared with the general population.2
Integrated medical care for persons with psychiatric illness makes a positive difference in health care quality and outcomes.3 So far, efforts to integrate mental and physical health care have focused on patients appearing in a primary care setting.4,5 However, many patients with coexisting physical and mental health problems fail to appear in primary health care systems, increasing the risk of poorer health outcomes. Barriers to accessing primary care include inadequate skills or experience to negotiate the health care system, poor support networks, and transportation difficulties.6 Homeless persons, approximately one third of whom may have a chronic mental illness, are at a particular disadvantage. Often, they are without insurance and find it difficult to navigate the service system.7 This study addresses one such set of particularly vulnerable and underserved patients—those presenting to the emergency department in psychiatric crisis.
Case management approaches in the community and collaborative efforts such as "stepped care" have yielded improved outcomes for patients with depression, suggesting that many patients with psychiatric problems can be managed effectively within primary care practices.8–10,11 Moreover, there is evidence that homeless persons can be identified and linked to physical health care and obtain appropriate treatment of mental illness and substance use.12
However, getting connected to the doctor may pose a problem for the patient emerging from psychiatric crisis, and simply providing to patients the name of a primary care provider or site does not seem to result in effective linkage.13 An opportune time for connection to and engagement in a primary care setting may be after a psychiatric crisis. This point may serve as an opportunity to initiate linkages between medical and mental health services, bridging the gap between mental health and primary care and initiating care continuity in both settings.
This study focuses on patients without a primary care "home" emerging from psychiatric crisis, comparing facilitated linkage with primary medical care with standard practice after a psychiatric emergency visit. We test the hypothesis that, in contrast to usual care, community-based care management will result in higher rates of connection to primary care. The study also examines variables that may facilitate or deter primary care entry, including insurance status, whether patients were admitted to the hospital at the time of psychiatric crisis, and linkages to community mental health care.
Methods
This article reports preliminary results on the rate of linkage to primary care within 3 months as part of an ongoing randomized control trial. So far, 101 patients have been enrolled and are being observed for 1 year. Patients present at an urban Comprehensive Psychiatric Emergency Program (CPEP). CPEP is accessible 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Eligibility criteria for the study require that persons be older than 18 years and have a DSM-IV-R–defined Axis I disorder.14 Patients are eligible if they either have no regular source of primary care or have not seen a primary care provider within 6 months. "Primary care provider" is defined as a clinician with whom the patient has an ongoing relationship on a regular basis. Patients are ineligible if deemed unstable, actively suicidal or homicidal, or unable to give informed consent. In the case of patients being admitted for stabilization, they are eligible for enrollment once stabilized and ready for discharge. The prospective follow-up occurs from the point of discharge. The study is approved through our University’s Institutional Review Board.
Usual Care
Services routinely offered through CPEP include complete psychiatric assessment and management, targeted therapeutic approaches, and linkages to community mental health services. Referral to primary medical care is provided on patient request or if a significant medical condition is identified in the emergency ward. Uninsured patients are given on-site assistance with health coverage. All patients receive needed medications.
Study Intervention
Care managers meet with intervention patients on study enrollment, within the first week of facilitation and routinely at primary care appointments. They maintain regular contact through face-to-face visits, and by phone. They also provide the following case-based assistance in regular meetings:
Information regarding sliding scale or "free" primary medical care sites.
Facilitation of access to primary care, with shared decision-making regarding primary care site location, provider preference, and travel routes.
Reinforce patient education and teaching that occurs at primary care visits.
Index cards for primary care providers with psychiatric hospital discharge diagnosis, pharmacotherapy, and mental health treatment site referral.
Follow-up, including home visits and mobile outreach when appropriate.
Assistance through peer connections to community mental health sites and social services.
Process
The CPEP patient logs are screened on a daily basis to determine patient eligibility. Those patients who meet the eligibility criteria are approached by a member of the research team and invited to join the study. Those patients who agree are given a series of baseline assessments and randomized to either the intervention group or the usual care group. The research team contacts both intervention and control groups on a monthly basis, tracking primary care utilization, insurance status, and mental health visits.
Outcome and Associated Variables
The primary outcome of interest for this article was the relative connection rate to primary care for each study group. "Connection" to primary care was defined as a completed visit within 3 months of study entry. This definition was based on criteria currently used for measuring quality of access to care by behavioral organizations.15 In pilot work for this study, even those patients without medical insurance completed a first visit within this time frame.
Associated variables of interest included investigating how other factors such as inpatient admission, insurance status, and linkage to mental health services related to successful primary care linkage within the specified time frame. Moreover, the rate of linkage for those persons with chronic disease, arguably those most in need of primary care, was of special interest.
Analysis
Basic descriptive statistics were used to characterize the participants in the usual care and intervention groups with regard to demographics and psychiatric and medical diagnosis. 2 tests were used to ascertain the relationship between the categorical variables of interest and the dichotomous outcome variable (linkage to primary care within 3 months of study enrollment). Odds ratios were calculated where appropriate. Variables of interest were condition (intervention versus usual care), insurance status at baseline and at 3 months from enrollment, linkage to mental health services before entering CPEP and at 3 months after enrollment, psychiatric diagnosis, medical diagnosis, and hospital status at the time of enrollment (regardless of whether the participant was admitted to the inpatient psychiatric ward).
Thereafter, variables with a statistically significant bivariate relationship with linkage to primary care were entered into a logistic regression model. Odds ratios from the final logistic regression analysis were examined to determine the association between each of the variables in the model and the outcome variable, controlling for the other predictors.
Results
Sample Characteristics
The demographic and diagnostic characteristics of participants in the intervention and usual care groups are presented in Table 1. As a result of randomization, the distributions of these variables were very well balanced across the intervention and usual care groups, suggesting that the 2 groups of participants were largely equivalent across several important dimensions. The average age of participants was relatively young (37 years), and both groups had a majority of male participants. Although the gender presentation to the psychiatric emergency ward was equal, more men presented without a designated primary care physician. Minority participation in the study was high, accounting for approximately 50% of the sample. Nearly 70% of subjects were unemployed, and approximately 80% had incomes below $10,000 per year. Most participants in both groups had either completed high school or had earned an equivalency diploma.
Within the sample as a whole, there was a wide diversity of psychiatric diagnoses; however, there were no significant group differences at baseline. The most common diagnoses of study participants fell under the umbrella of mood (primarily Major Depression), psychotic (Schizophrenia and Schizoaffective Disorder), and substance use disorders. A substantial portion of participants (36%) was diagnosed with both a substance use disorder and another Axis I disorder.
In addition to the aforementioned psychiatric disabilities, nearly half of the study participants suffered from one or more medical comorbidities—despite their relatively young average age (37 years). Many of these medical comorbidities were chronic conditions, including diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, arthritis, and asthma. The presence of medical comorbidity to such an extent provided further evidence of the necessity for and potential benefit of prompt linkage to primary care for study participants.
Linkage to Primary Care
A summary of the statistically significant results from the subsequent bivariate relationships is displayed in Table 2.
Condition
There was a significant relationship between condition (intervention versus usual care) and successful linkage to primary care within 3 months of enrollment in the study. Whereas 57% participants in the intervention group were successfully linked, only 16% of the usual care group completed a primary care visit within the critical time period. This relationship is statistically significant 2 (1) = 18.21, P < .001; odds ratio (OR) = 7.24 (95% CI = 2.76 to 18.99). It is arguable that it is most important for those with a medical comorbidity to obtain linkage to primary medical care. More than half (54%) of these patients were linked to primary care within 3 months.
Insurance
At baseline, there was no difference in rates of insurance coverage between groups. Approximately 48% of both the intervention and control groups had some form of insurance coverage; the vast majority who had insurance were publicly insured (Medicaid). At the 3-month follow-up point, 78% of the usual care and 86% of the intervention group had managed to obtain insurance coverage. Although there was no relationship between baseline insurance status and linkage to primary care, there was a relationship between insurance status at 3-month follow-up and linkage. In particular, 45% of those who were insured at the 3-month time point were linked to primary care compared with only 11% of those without insurance [2 (1) = 6.99, P = .008; OR = 6.44 (95% CI = 1.39 to 29.79)].
Inpatient Status
Approximately 55% of the sample required inpatient hospitalization after the psychiatric crisis and entry to CPEP. Those enrolled from the inpatient ward comprised approximately equal portions of both the intervention and usual care groups (58% of usual care and 52% of intervention). Requiring inpatient hospitalization at the time of psychiatric crisis may serve as a proxy for the severity of the crisis and may, in turn, relate to subsequent participation in primary care. Of those persons who were hospitalized at the time of psychiatric crisis, only 27% were linked to primary care, whereas 52% of those with routine discharges from CPEP obtained linkage. This relationship was statistically significant [2 (1) = 6.55, P = .01; OR = 0.34 (95% CI = 0.15 to 0.79)].
Linkage to Mental Health Services
Approximately half of the participants in both the intervention and usual care groups were linked to mental health services before psychiatric crisis and subsequent enrollment in the current study. Three months after enrollment in the study, approximately 46% of the usual care group and 53% of the intervention group reported linkage to mental health services. Although there was not a significant relationship between mental health linkage before crisis and linkage to primary care, a significant relationship did emerge for mental health linkage at the 3-month time point [2 (1) = 6.66, P = .01; OR = 3.29 (95% CI = 1.30 to 8.30)]. Forty-eight percent of those linked to mental health services were also linked to primary care, whereas only 22% of those not linked to mental health services obtained linkage to primary care.
Diagnostic Variables
There were no significant relationships between psychiatric diagnosis or medical diagnosis and linkage to primary care.
Logistic Regression
To create a more comprehensive preliminary model for predicting linkage to primary care, all 4 of the variables listed in Table 2 were entered into a logistic regression. The model yielded a Cox and Snell R2 of 0.35 and a Nagelkerke R2 of 0.47. Controlling for each of the other predictors in the model, all 4 variables remained statistically significant predictors of linkage to primary care.
Of most interest perhaps for the current study is that participation in the intervention group was a significant predictor of linkage to primary care even when controlling for insurance status, linkage to mental health, and inpatient status at the time of psychiatric crisis. Adjusted odds ratios and other relevant statistics from the logistic regression analysis are displayed in Table 3.
Discussion
In this study of 101 persons, the primary outcome of successful connection to primary medical care after psychiatric crisis was significantly more likely for patients who had community case managers, relative to control subjects. In earlier studies, active linkage after psychiatric crisis improved function16 and increased adherence to mental health care.17
Nurse case management of persons with serious psychiatric disabilities is feasible and effective in both community and primary care office settings.18 We found that care managers and case-based interventions had a significant positive influence on attendance at primary care. This may speak to a "structured system" approach, as identified through focus groups discussing the management of crisis in mental illness.19
We concentrated on 3 variables of interest that may have had an association with our primary outcome measure. In all 3 circumstances, intervention and control groups had no significant differences at baseline.
Although initial insurance status was not associated with primary care linkage, obtaining insurance within 3 months of psychiatric crisis seemed to correlate with successful primary care attendance. Persons reporting mental disorders are twice as likely to report being denied medical insurance because of a pre-existing condition, and even those with insurance may delay medical care because of inadequate coverage or access difficulties.20,21 Although we did not look specifically at insurance type in this study, differences in health coverage may affect primary and mental health care access. There is a need for further investigation of how health insurance patterns influence care attendance and continuity.
Patients who accessed community mental health care were more likely to attend primary care. An earlier study22 found that for patients discharged after psychiatric emergency, use of care plans emphasizing liaisons with mental health and primary care led to decreased emergency department visits.
Inpatient hospitalization had a negative effect on initial linkage to primary medical care in this analysis. Although there was no significant relationship between actual diagnosis and linkage, diagnostic severity or other factors not identified in this study, such as homelessness, may serve as barriers to primary care entry.
This study has several limitations. Although linkage within 3 months was achieved through case management, this time frame is obviously inadequate to assess adherence to care. At the completion of the study, data on changes over time and downstream effects subsequent to primary care linkage will be described. Furthermore, although there is information on mental health visits, care managers did not explicitly provide assistance with integration of mental health and primary care. This makes it difficult to assess in this study whether features within the primary care setting influence mental health care. Finally, the circumstances surrounding inpatient admission need to be explored and further evaluated with regard to primary care attendance.
Community case management did make a significant difference in primary care entry for persons without a primary care provider. Having a regular doctor can make a positive difference on access to primary care and lead to improvement in chronic care conditions.23,24 On-going work must elucidate whether patients adhere to care, and whether a mental health-primary care connection results in improvement in health, functional status, and quality of life.
Linking patients from psychiatric crisis to a primary care home demonstrates one process of care and coverage for a vulnerable population. Research in this area may have long-term implications for better care and public health policy by identifying the features surrounding access to primary care that may improve outcomes for patients with mental disorders.
Acknowledgments
We gratefully acknowledge the expert assistance of Angela Henke in the preparation of the manuscript.
Notes
This study was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Generalist Physician’s Scholarship Program, the Erie County Department of Mental Health, and the Department of Family Medicine, State University of New York at Buffalo.
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