Stumbo Scott P, Yarborough Bobbi Jo H, Yarborough Micah T, Green Carla A
1 Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Northwest, Portland, OR, USA.
Am J Health Promot. 2018 Nov;32(8):1730-1739. doi: 10.1177/0890117118763233. Epub 2018 Apr 15.
Individuals with mental illnesses have higher morbidity rates and reduced life expectancy compared to the general population. Understanding how patients and providers perceive the need for prevention, as well as the barriers and beliefs that may contribute to insufficient care, are important for improving service delivery tailored to this population.
Cross-sectional; mixed methods.
An integrated health system and a network of federally qualified health centers and safety net clinics.
Interviews (n = 30) and surveys (n = 249) with primary care providers. Interviews (n = 158) and surveys (n = 160) with patients diagnosed with schizophrenia, bipolar, anxiety, or major depressive disorders.
Semi-structured interviews and surveys.
Thematic analysis for qualitative data; frequencies for quantitative data.
More than half (n = 131, 53%) of clinicians believed patients with mental illnesses care less about preventive care than the general population, yet 88% (n = 139) of patients reported interest in improving health. Most providers (n = 216, 88%) lacked confidence that patients with mental illnesses would follow preventive recommendations; 82% (n = 129) of patients reported they would try to change lifestyles if their doctor recommended. Clinicians explained that their perception of patients' chaotic lives and lack of interest in preventive care contributed to their fatalistic attitudes on care delivery to this population. Clinicians and patients agreed on substantial need for additional support for behavior changes. Clinicians reported providing informational support by keeping messages simple; patients reported a desire for more detailed information on reasons to complete preventive care. Patients also detailed the need for assistive and tangible support to manage behavioral health changes.
Our results suggest a few clinical changes could help patients complete preventive care recommendations and improve health behaviors: improving clinician-patient collaboration on realistic goal setting, increasing visit time or utilizing behavioral health consultants that bridge primary and specialty mental health care, and increasing educational and tangible patient support services.
与普通人群相比,患有精神疾病的个体发病率更高,预期寿命更短。了解患者和医疗服务提供者如何看待预防的必要性,以及可能导致护理不足的障碍和观念,对于改善针对这一人群的服务提供至关重要。
横断面研究;混合方法。
一个综合卫生系统以及一个由联邦合格健康中心和安全网诊所组成的网络。
对初级保健提供者进行访谈(n = 30)和调查(n = 249)。对被诊断患有精神分裂症、双相情感障碍、焦虑症或重度抑郁症的患者进行访谈(n = 158)和调查(n = 160)。
半结构化访谈和调查。
对定性数据进行主题分析;对定量数据进行频率分析。
超过一半(n = 131,53%)的临床医生认为,患有精神疾病的患者比普通人群对预防性护理的关注度更低,但88%(n = 139)的患者表示有改善健康的意愿。大多数医疗服务提供者(n = 216,88%)对患有精神疾病的患者会遵循预防性建议缺乏信心;82%(n = 129)的患者表示,如果医生建议,他们会尝试改变生活方式。临床医生解释说,他们对患者混乱生活的看法以及患者对预防性护理缺乏兴趣,导致他们对为这一人群提供护理持宿命论态度。临床医生和患者一致认为,在行为改变方面非常需要额外的支持。临床医生报告说通过简化信息来提供信息支持;患者表示希望获得关于完成预防性护理原因的更详细信息。患者还详细说明了在管理行为健康变化方面需要辅助性和实际的支持。
我们的结果表明,一些临床改变有助于患者完成预防性护理建议并改善健康行为:在现实目标设定方面改善医患合作,增加就诊时间或利用连接初级和专科精神卫生护理的行为健康顾问,以及增加教育性和实际的患者支持服务。