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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701
Review of The implementer's guide to primary care behavioral health
Type: Journal Article
Authors: P. Van Wyk
Year: 2015
Publication Place: United States
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
702
Revision of the integration of mental health into primary healthcare program and the family physician program
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Jafar Bolhari, Kourosh Kabir, Ahmad Hajebi, Seyed Abas Bagheri Yazdi, Hasan Rafiei, Masoud Ahmadzad Asl, Nilofar Mahdavi Hazave, Mohamadreza Rahbar, Seyed Abbas Motevalian, Hosein Kazemaini
Year: 2016
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
703
Revisiting Balint's innovation: enhancing capacity in collaborative mental health care
Type: Journal Article
Authors: E. Lee, D. Kealy
Year: 2014
Publication Place: England
Abstract: Interprofessional collaboration is increasingly recognized as a key response to the challenges associated with complex mental health issues in community primary-care settings. Relatively few practice models, however, provide an orientation and a structure that combines quality patient care, professional development, and the building of community capacity. A psychodynamic tradition of supervision and collaboration, an approach known as the Balint model, holds considerable potential to bring this orientation to collaborative primary care and mental health teams. As a consultation group, the Balint approach brings participants' attention to subtle emotional-interpersonal phenomena such as the provider-patient relationship, the presentation of illness, and the experiences of patients and team members. We introduce and provide an overview of the Balint group model, including several concepts proposed by Balint to illuminate the emotional and relational complexities of providing mental health care in a collaborative primary-care setting. The context of our discussion is the implementation of a modified Balint group approach within a Canadian collaborative mental health Care (CMHC) program. We also discuss how an interprofessional application of this approach can enhance patient care, contribute to care providers' professional development, and build community capacity.
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
704
Risk assessment practice within primary mental health care: A logics perspective
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Adam Flintoff, Speed Ewen, Susan McPherson
Year: 2019
Publication Place: London
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
706
Safety-Net Providers In Some US Communities Have Increasingly Embraced Coordinated Care Models
Type: Journal Article
Authors: P. Cunningham, L. Felland, L. Stark
Year: 2012
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
707
Satisfaction in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services: Translating Users' Feedback into Measurement
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Anna Brown, Tamsin Ford, Jessica Deighton, Miranda Wolpert
Year: 2012
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
709
Schizophrenia in primary care
Type: Journal Article
Authors: David Goldberg, Gabriel Ivbijaro, Lucja Kolkiewicz, Sammy Ohene
Year: 2013
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
712
Screening for depression in the primary care population
Type: Journal Article
Authors: D. E. Deneke, H. Schultz, T. E. Fluent
Year: 2014
Publication Place: United States
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
713
Screening for metabolic risk among patients with severe mental illness and diabetes: A national comparison.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Alex J. Mitchell, Sheila Ann Hardy
Year: 2013
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
714
Screening for obstructive sleep apnea among individuals with severe mental illness at a primary care clinic
Type: Journal Article
Year: 2013
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
716
Screening, Referral and Treatment of Depression by Australian Cardiologists
Type: Journal Article
Authors: D. L. Hare, A. G. O. Stewart, A. Driscoll, S. Mathews, S. R. Toukhsati
Year: 2020
Publication Place: Australia
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
717
Service-user involvement in primary care mental health: Where are we going, and where do we even begin?
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Simon Stuart, Sean Hunter, Michael Killoran Ross
Year: 2012
Publication Place: United Kingdom
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
718
Severity alone should no longer determine therapeutic choice in the management of depression in primary care: Findings from a survey of general practitioners
Type: Journal Article
Authors: G. S. Malhi, Kristina Fritz, Carissa M. Coulston, Lisa Lampe, Danielle M. Bargh, Michael Ablett, Bill Lyndon, Rick Sapsford, Mike Theodoros, Derek Woolfall, Andrea van der Zypp, Malcolm Hopwood
Year: 2014
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
720
Severity of mental health impairment and trajectories of improvement in an integrated primary care clinic
Type: Journal Article
Authors: C. J. Bryan, M. L. Corso, K. A. Corso, C. E. Morrow, K. E. Kanzler, B. Ray-Sannerud
Year: 2012
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: Objective: To model typical trajectories for improvement among patients treated in an integrated primary care behavioral health service, multilevel models were used to explore the relationship between baseline mental health impairment level and eventual mental health functioning across follow-up appointments. Method: Data from 495 primary care patients (61.1% female, 60.7% Caucasian, 37.141 +/- 12.21 years of age) who completed the Behavioral Health Measure (Kopta & Lowry, 2002) at each primary care appointment were used for the analysis. Three separate models were constructed to identify clinical improvement in terms of number of appointments attended, baseline impairment severity level, and the interaction of these 2 variables. Results: The data showed that 71.5% of patients improved across appointments, 56.8% of which (40.5% of the entire sample) was clinically meaningful and reliable. Number of appointments and baseline severity of impairment significantly accounted for variability in clinical outcome, with trajectories of change varying across appointments as a function of baseline severity. Patients with more severe impairment at baseline improved faster than patients with less severe baseline impairment. Conclusions: Patients treated within an integrated primary care behavioral health service demonstrate significant improvements in clinical status, even those with the most severe levels of distress at baseline. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved).
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection