Providing Health Physicals and/or Health Monitoring Services in Mental Health Clinics: Impact on Laboratory Screening and Monitoring for High Risk Populations.
Joshua BreslauEmily Leckman-WestinBing HanDiana GuarasiHao YuMarcela Horvitz-LennonRiti PritamMolly FinnertyPublished in: Administration and policy in mental health (2021)
Providing physical health care in specialty mental health clinics is a promising approach to improving the health status of adults with serious mental illness, but most programs examined in prior studies are not financially sustainable. This study assessed the impact on quality of care of a low-cost program implemented in New York State that allowed mental health clinics to be reimbursed by Medicaid for provision of health monitoring and health physicals (HM/HP). Medicaid claims data were analyzed with generalized linear multilevel models to examine change over time in quality of physical health care associated with HM/HP services. Recipients of HM/HP services were compared to control clinic patients [Per protocol (PP)] and with non-recipients of HM/HP services from both intervention and control clinics [As-Treated (AT)]. HM/HP clinic patients, regardless of receipt of HM/HP services, were compared with control clinic patients [Intent-to-Treat (ITT)]. Analyses were conducted with adjustment for patient demographic and clinical characteristics and prior year service use. The PP and AT analyses found significant improvement in measure of blood glucose screening for patients on antipsychotic medication and HbA1C testing for patients with diabetes (AOR range 1.26-1.33) and the AT analysis found significant improvement in cholesterol screening for patients on antipsychotic medication (AOR 1.24). However, ITT analysis found no significant changes in quality of care in HM/HP clinic caseloads relative to control clinics. The low-cost HM/HP program has the potential to benefit patients who receive supported services, but its impact is limited by remaining barriers to service implementation.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- healthcare
- primary care
- end stage renal disease
- mental illness
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- public health
- randomized controlled trial
- low cost
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- health information
- adipose tissue
- affordable care act
- type diabetes
- case report
- machine learning
- risk assessment
- electronic health record
- genetic diversity
- adverse drug
- data analysis