Literature Collection

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Grey Literature

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Opioids & SU

The Literature Collection contains over 10,000 references for published and grey literature on the integration of behavioral health and primary care. Learn More

Use the Search feature below to find references for your terms across the entire Literature Collection, or limit your searches by Authors, Keywords, or Titles and by Year, Type, or Topic. View your search results as displayed, or use the options to: Show more references per page; Sort references by Title or Date; and Refine your search criteria. Expand an individual reference to View Details. Full-text access to the literature may be available through a link to PubMed, a DOI, or a URL. References may also be exported for use in bibliographic software (e.g., EndNote, RefWorks, Zotero).

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681
Recognition, management, and course of anxiety and depression in general practice
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Johan Ormel, Maarten W. Koeter, W. van den Brink, G. van de Willige
Year: 1991
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
682
Recognition, management, and outcomes of depression in primary care.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: G. E. Simon, M. Von Korff
Year: 1995
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
683
Recommendation from the community preventive services task force for use of collaborative care for the management of depressive disorders
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Community Preventive Services Task Force
Year: 2012
Publication Place: Netherlands
Abstract: The Community Preventive Services Task Force recommends collaborative care for management of depressive disorders, based on strong evidence of effectiveness in improving depression symptoms, adherence to treatment, response to treatment, and remission and recovery from depression.
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
685
Reducing Barriers to Mental Health and Social Services for Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans: Outcomes of an Integrated Primary Care Clinic
Type: Journal Article
Authors: K. H. Seal, G. Cohen, D. Bertenthal, B. E. Cohen, S. Maguen, A. Daley
Year: 2011
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Despite high rates of post-deployment psychosocial problems in Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, mental health and social services are under-utilized. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) integrated care (IC) clinic (established in April 2007), offering an initial three-part primary care, mental health and social services visit, improved psychosocial services utilization in Iraq and Afghanistan veterans compared to usual care (UC), a standard primary care visit with referral for psychosocial services as needed. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study using VA administrative data. POPULATION: Five hundred and twenty-six Iraq and Afghanistan veterans initiating primary care at a VA medical center between April 1, 2005 and April 31, 2009. MAIN MEASURES: Multivariable models compared the independent effects of primary care clinic type (IC versus UC) on mental health and social services utilization outcomes. KEY RESULTS: After 2007, compared to UC, veterans presenting to the IC primary care clinic were significantly more likely to have had a within-30-day mental health evaluation (92% versus 59%, p /= 1 mental health disorder(s), there was a median of 1 follow-up specialty mental health visit within the first year in both clinics. CONCLUSIONS: Among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans new to primary care, an integrated primary care visit further improved the likelihood of an initial mental health and social services evaluation over background increases, but did not improve retention in specialty mental health services.
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
686
Reducing hospital readmission through team-based primary care: A 7-week pilot study integrating behavioral health and pharmacy
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Lauren DeCaporale-Ryan, Nabila Ahmed-Sarwar, Robbyn Upham, Karen Mahler, Katie Lashway
Year: 2017
Publication Place: Washington, District of Columbia
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
687
Reducing the Burden of Suicide in the U.S.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Cynthia A. Claassen, Jane L. Pearson, Dmitry Khodyakov, Phillip M. Satow, Robert Gebbia, Alan L. Berman, Daniel J. Reidenberg, Saul Feldman, Sherry Molock, Michelle C. Carras, Rene M. Lento, Joel Sherrill, Beverly Pringle, Siddhartha Dalal, Thomas R. Insel
Year: 2014
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
Reference Links:       
689
Reduction of Patient-Reported Antidepressant Side Effects, by Type of Collaborative Care
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Teresa J. Hudson, John C. Fortney, Jeffrey M. Pyne, Liya Lu, Dinesh Mittal
Year: 2015
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
690
Reflections on 10 years of counseling in primay care and IAP
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Vicki Palmer
Year: 2018
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
691
Reflections on working as a child psychiatrist in the Hasbro primary care clinic
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Joshua Blum
Year: 2014
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
692
Reliability and normative data for the Behavioral Health Measure (BHM) in primary care behavioral health settings
Type: Journal Article
Authors: C. J. Bryan, T. Blount, K. A. Kanzler, C. E. Morrow, K. A. Corso, M. A. Corso, B. Ray-Sannerud
Year: 2014
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: The Behavioral Health Measure (BHM) is a brief self-report measure of general psychological distress and functioning developed for the tracking of mental health outcomes in outpatient psychotherapy settings (Kopta & Lowry, 2002). Although the BHM is used in integrated primary care behavioral health clinics, the scale's psychometric properties have not been evaluated in these settings. The current study investigated the BHM's psychometric properties, including its factor structure and reliability, and presents normative data from 3 large integrated primary care clinics. Mean scores for each of the BHM's 4 scales were significantly lower (i.e., more distress) for women than men, with scores being stable across the 3 primary care samples. Confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated adequate fit for the 3-factor and 1-factor models, with fit improving when 3 items were omitted. Internal consistency estimates for the BHM's 4 scales ranged from adequate to very good (alpha range: .72-.93). The 4 scales were highly intercorrelated, suggesting they measure similar constructs. Results suggest a revised, 17-item version of the BHM has adequate structure and reliability estimates, and is appropriate for use in primary care settings.
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
693
Reliable integrative assessment of health care needs in elderly persons: the INTERMED for the Elderly (IM-E)
Type: Journal Article
Authors: B. Wild, S. Lechner, W. Herzog, I. Maatouk, D. Wesche, E. Raum, H. Muller, H. Brenner, J. Slaets, F. Huyse, W. Sollner
Year: 2011
Publication Place: England
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
694
Researchers Call For Behavioral Health, Model Pairing In Primary Care Demo
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Chelsea Cirruzzo
Year: 2020
Publication Place: Arlington
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
695
RESPECT-PTSD: re-engineering systems for the primary care treatment of PTSD, a randomized controlled trial
Type: Journal Article
Authors: P. P. Schnurr, M. J. Friedman, T. E. Oxman, A. J. Dietrich, M. W. Smith, B. Shiner, E. Forshay, J. Gui, V. Thurston
Year: 2013
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Although collaborative care is effective for treating depression and other mental disorders in primary care, there have been no randomized trials of collaborative care specifically for patients with Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). OBJECTIVE: To compare a collaborative approach, the Three Component Model (3CM), with usual care for treating PTSD in primary care. DESIGN: The study was a two-arm, parallel randomized clinical trial. PTSD patients were recruited from five primary care clinics at four Veterans Affairs healthcare facilities and randomized to receive usual care or usual care plus 3CM. Blinded assessors collected data at baseline and 3-month and 6-month follow-up. PARTICIPANTS: Participants were 195 Veterans. Their average age was 45 years, 91% were male, 58% were white, 40% served in Iraq or Afghanistan, and 42% served in Vietnam. INTERVENTION: All participants received usual care. Participants assigned to 3CM also received telephone care management. Care managers received supervision from a psychiatrist. MAIN MEASURES: PTSD symptom severity was the primary outcome. Depression, functioning, perceived quality of care, utilization, and costs were secondary outcomes. KEY RESULTS: There were no differences between 3CM and usual care in symptoms or functioning. Participants assigned to 3CM were more likely to have a mental health visit, fill an antidepressant prescription, and have adequate antidepressant refills. 3CM participants also had more mental health visits and higher outpatient pharmacy costs. CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest the need for careful examination of the way that collaborative care models are implemented for treating PTSD, and for additional supports to encourage primary care providers to manage PTSD.
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
696
Response: Effectiveness in Primary Care is Paramount, But Need Not Come at the Expense of Efficiency.
Type: Journal Article
Year: 2014
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
698
Review of Integrated behavioral health in primary care: Step-by-step guidance for assessment and intervention
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Rodger Kessler
Year: 2010
Publication Place: US: Educational Publishing Foundation; Systems, & Health
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
699
Review of Integrated care: Working at the interface of primary care and behavioral health.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Mark Ragins
Year: 2014
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
700
Review of Psychiatry in primary care. Fourth edition.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Richard Balon
Year: 2012
Publication Place: US US US US Netherlands United Kingdom
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection