Engel C C, Kroenke K, Katon W J
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
Mil Med. 1994 Mar;159(3):203-9.
Epidemiologic studies have shown that more than half of mentally ill patients in the United States receive their psychiatric care exclusively in primary care settings. This fraction may be even higher in the military due to concern over possible occupational repercussions resulting from use of specialty psychiatric care and specialist shortages. Collaboration between generalists and mental health care specialists could potentially improve mental health care delivery and reduce psychiatric disability for a large segment of the Army population who have a psychiatric disorder but may not seek specialty care. Collaborative efforts can reinforce military generalists' essential gate-keeping function, thereby decreasing unnecessary medical utilization and health care costs. The authors review the problems associated with mental health care delivery in primary care and provide examples of collaborative models previously studied or currently being explored. A four-part Army Primary Care-Mental Health Services Agenda is proposed, consisting of: (1) coordinated research including primary care-mental health services research and community-based epidemiologic studies; (2) formation of a primary care-mental health services advisory committee for aiding with policy and program development; (3) graduate and continuing medical education in primary care-mental health services emphasizing interdisciplinary collaborative skills; and (4) clinical implementation of feasible collaborative interdisciplinary mental health care models adapted to the range of unique Army primary care settings. The main goal of the Army Primary Care-Mental Health Services Agenda is to improve access to Army mental health care in the most efficacious and cost-effective way and to help minimize the organizational impact of disability related to psychosocial distress.
流行病学研究表明,在美国,超过半数的精神病患者仅在初级保健机构接受精神科护理。由于担心使用专科精神科护理可能产生的职业影响以及专科医生短缺,这一比例在军队中可能更高。通科医生与精神卫生保健专家之间的合作有可能改善精神卫生保健服务的提供,并减少很大一部分患有精神疾病但可能不寻求专科护理的陆军人员的精神残疾。合作努力可以加强军队通科医生至关重要的把关功能,从而减少不必要的医疗利用和医疗保健成本。作者回顾了与初级保健中精神卫生保健服务提供相关的问题,并提供了先前研究或目前正在探索的合作模式的实例。本文提出了一个由四部分组成的陆军初级保健-精神卫生服务议程,包括:(1)协调研究,包括初级保健-精神卫生服务研究和基于社区的流行病学研究;(2)成立初级保健-精神卫生服务咨询委员会,以协助政策和项目制定;(3)开展初级保健-精神卫生服务方面的研究生和继续医学教育,强调跨学科合作技能;(4)临床实施适合陆军各种独特初级保健环境的可行的跨学科合作精神卫生保健模式。陆军初级保健-精神卫生服务议程的主要目标是以最有效和最具成本效益的方式改善陆军精神卫生保健服务的可及性,并帮助尽量减少与心理社会困扰相关的残疾对组织的影响。