Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 3535 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
BMC Prim Care. 2024 Oct 16;25(1):371. doi: 10.1186/s12875-024-02616-w.
Given that the majority of suicide decedents visit primary care in the year preceding death, primary care has been identified as a key setting in which to engage patients at risk for suicide in mental health services. The objective of this research was to identify barriers and facilitators to engagement in mental health services among primary care patients at risk for suicide to inform the development of strategies to increase engagement.
Seventy-four semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with primary care patients (n = 20), primary care (n = 18) and behavioral health (n = 12) clinicians, mental health intake coordinators (n = 4), and health system and clinic leaders (n = 20). Patients who had been referred for mental health services from primary care and reported an elevated score (≥ 1) on item 9 on the Patient Health Questionnaire at the time of referral were eligible to participate. Eligible clinicians and leaders were employed in a primary care or behavioral health setting in a single large health system with an integrated mental health program. Interviews typically lasted 30-60 min, were completed over video conference or phone, and were coded by members of the research team using a rapid qualitative analysis procedure.
Participants were primarily female (64.9%), white (70.3%) and non-Hispanic/Latine (91.9%). The most identified barriers to mental health care engagement were waitlists, capacity limits, insurance, patient characteristics, communication, collaboration, and/or difficulties surrounding travel. The most commonly cited facilitators of engagement included telehealth, integrated care models, reminders, case management support, psychoeducation, motivational enhancement, and scheduling flexibility. Concrete suggestions for improving engagement in mental health services included increasing communication between providers, streamlining referral and intake processes, providing reminders and follow ups, and advocacy for increased reimbursement for suicide risk assessment.
Results underscore the myriad barriers patients at risk for suicide encounter when attempting to engage in mental health care in a primary care setting. Facilitators of engagement and suggestions for improving connections to care were also identified, which can inform the design of implementation strategies to improve engagement in mental health services among primary care patients at risk for suicide.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05021224 (Registered August 19, 2021).
鉴于大多数自杀死者在死亡前一年都会去看初级保健医生,因此初级保健医生被认为是一个关键的场所,可以让有自杀风险的患者接触到精神卫生服务。本研究的目的是确定有自杀风险的初级保健患者接受精神卫生服务的障碍和促进因素,为制定增加参与度的策略提供信息。
对 74 名初级保健患者(n=20)、初级保健医生(n=18)和行为健康医生(n=12)、精神健康入组协调员(n=4)以及卫生系统和诊所负责人(n=20)进行了 74 次半结构化定性访谈。患者在被初级保健医生转介到精神卫生服务时,其 PHQ-9 得分(≥1 分)升高,并且有资格参加。有资格的临床医生和领导人在一个拥有综合精神卫生项目的大型单一卫生系统的初级保健或行为健康环境中工作。访谈通常持续 30-60 分钟,通过视频会议或电话进行,由研究团队的成员使用快速定性分析程序进行编码。
参与者主要为女性(64.9%)、白人(70.3%)和非西班牙裔/拉丁裔(91.9%)。精神卫生保健参与的最大障碍是候诊名单、能力限制、保险、患者特征、沟通、协作以及旅行方面的困难。促进参与的最常见因素包括远程医疗、综合护理模式、提醒、个案管理支持、心理教育、动机增强和灵活的预约安排。提高精神卫生服务参与度的具体建议包括增加提供者之间的沟通、简化转介和入组流程、提供提醒和跟进、倡导增加自杀风险评估的报销。
研究结果强调了有自杀风险的患者在初级保健环境中尝试接受精神卫生保健时所面临的各种障碍。还确定了促进参与的因素以及改善获得医疗服务的建议,这可以为设计提高有自杀风险的初级保健患者参与精神卫生服务的实施策略提供信息。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT05021224(2021 年 8 月 19 日注册)。