Chukrun Tamar, Tran Olivia, Hobbs Katherine, Taylor John B
Department of Internal Medicine and Psychiatry, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Author Health, Medford, MA, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2025 Apr;73(4):1237-1249. doi: 10.1111/jgs.19313. Epub 2024 Dec 17.
Older adults with serious mental illness (SMI) experience higher rates of medical comorbidities, mortality, hospital readmissions, and total healthcare spending when compared with Medicare beneficiaries without SMI. Although telehealth provides an opportunity to overcome barriers to behavioral healthcare access, older adults face unique challenges when accessing and utilizing telehealth services. We present Author Health's care model, which integrates virtual-first behavioral health care with an interdisciplinary approach to health-related social needs (HRSN) screening and intervention in older adults.
We launched an innovative behavioral healthcare delivery model in collaboration with primary care for Medicare Advantage recipients with SMI, substance use disorders (SUD), and dementia. All patients completed an intake with an MD/NP and were offered screening for HRSN at entry using the Accountable Health Communities HRSN tool. Primary diagnosis was assigned and categorized into SMI/SUD/dementia and non-SMI. Logistic regression was used to quantify the odds of food, housing, and transportation insecurity explained by SMI/SUD/dementia versus non-SMI behavioral health conditions.
A total of 2301 patients completed an intake from January 2023 to March 2024. Moderate/severe depression (40%) was the most common primary target condition at intake, followed by dementia/Alzheimer's disease (12%) and bipolar disorder (5%). The rates of housing insecurity, food insecurity, and transportation insecurity were 27%, 30%, and 21%, respectively. Within our sample of Medicare Advantage participants in Florida, patients with SMI/SUD/dementia were 1.42 times (p < 0.05) and 1.58 times (p < 0.01) more likely to report housing insecurity and food insecurity, respectively, when compared with those with mild/moderate behavioral health conditions.
Author Health provides a blueprint for behavioral health services that remove barriers and provide tenacious, consistent, and whole-person virtual-first behavioral health care tailored to the unique needs of older adults. Our sample of Medicare Advantage participants in Florida suggests SMI/SUD/dementia may be a predictor for HRSN independent of socioeconomic status and race/ethnicity.
与没有严重精神疾病(SMI)的医疗保险受益人相比,患有严重精神疾病的老年人患医疗合并症、死亡率、医院再入院率和总医疗支出的比例更高。尽管远程医疗为克服行为医疗保健获取障碍提供了机会,但老年人在获取和使用远程医疗服务时面临独特的挑战。我们介绍了作者健康的护理模式,该模式将虚拟优先行为医疗保健与跨学科方法相结合,用于对老年人的健康相关社会需求(HRSN)进行筛查和干预。
我们与初级保健机构合作,为患有严重精神疾病、物质使用障碍(SUD)和痴呆症的医疗保险优势计划受益人推出了一种创新的行为医疗保健提供模式。所有患者均由医生/执业护士进行接诊,并在入院时使用“可问责健康社区HRSN工具”进行HRSN筛查。确定主要诊断并将其分类为严重精神疾病/物质使用障碍/痴呆症和非严重精神疾病。使用逻辑回归来量化由严重精神疾病/物质使用障碍/痴呆症与非严重精神疾病行为健康状况所解释的食物、住房和交通不安全的几率。
从2023年1月到2024年3月,共有2301名患者完成了接诊。中度/重度抑郁症(40%)是接诊时最常见的主要目标疾病,其次是痴呆症/阿尔茨海默病(12%)和双相情感障碍(5%)。住房不安全、食物不安全和交通不安全的发生率分别为27%、30%和21%。在我们佛罗里达州医疗保险优势计划参与者的样本中,与患有轻度/中度行为健康状况者相比,患有严重精神疾病/物质使用障碍/痴呆症的患者报告住房不安全和食物不安全的可能性分别高出1.42倍(p<0.05)和1.58倍(p<0.01)。
作者健康提供了一种行为健康服务蓝图,该蓝图消除障碍,并提供针对老年人独特需求定制的坚韧、一致且全面的虚拟优先行为医疗保健。我们佛罗里达州医疗保险优势计划参与者的样本表明,严重精神疾病/物质使用障碍/痴呆症可能是独立于社会经济地位和种族/族裔的健康相关社会需求的一个预测指标。