Literature Collection

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Grey Literature

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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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762
The co-occurrence of common mental and physical disorders within Australian families: A national population-based study
Type: Journal Article
Authors: S. Saha, T. J. Stedman, J. G. Scott, J. J. McGrath
Year: 2013
Abstract: Objective:Because comorbidity between mental and physical disorders is commonly found in patients, it would be expected that this pattern would also be reflected at the family level. During a recent population-based survey of common mental disorders, respondents were asked about the presence of selected mental and physical disorders in their relatives. The aim of this research was to describe the within-family co-occurrence of selected common physical and mental disorders in a population-based sample.Methods:Subjects were drawn from the Australian National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing 2007. A modified version of the World Mental Health Survey Initiative of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (WMH-CIDI 3.0, henceforth CIDI) was used to identify lifetime-ever common psychiatric disorders (anxiety disorders, depression, drug or alcohol disorders). The respondents were asked if any of their relatives had one of a list of psychiatric (anxiety, bipolar disorder, depression, drug or alcohol problem, schizophrenia) or general physical disorders (cancer, heart problems, intellectual disability, memory problems). We examined the relationship between the variables of interest using logistic regression, adjusting for potential confounding factors.Results:Compared to otherwise-well respondents, those who had a CIDI diagnosis of major depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, or drug or alcohol abuse/dependence were significantly more likely to have first-degree relatives with (a) the same diagnosis as the respondent, (b) other mental disorders not identified in the respondent, and (c) a broad range of general physical conditions.Conclusions:Individuals with common mental disorders report greater familial co-occurrence for a range of mental and physical disorders. When eliciting family histories, clinicians should remain mindful that both mental and physical disorders can co-occur within families.
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
765
The conversation revolution. Interview by Susan Solomon
Type: Journal Article
Authors: D. deBronkart
Year: 2013
Publication Place: United States
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
766
The current state of integrated care: an overview
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Mirella M. N. Minkman
Year: 2012
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
767
The description and evaluation of the implementation of an integrated healthcare model
Type: Journal Article
Authors: J. S. Funderburk, D. E. Sugarman, S. A. Maisto, P. Ouimette, M. Schohn, L. Lantinga, L. Wray, S. Batki, B. Nelson, D. Coolhart, K. Strutynski
Year: 2010
Publication Place: United States
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
768
The design, implementation, and acceptance of a primary care-based intervention to prevent depression relapse
Type: Journal Article
Authors: E. Ludman, M. Von Korff, W. Katon, E. Lin, G. Simon, E. Walker, J. Unutzer, T. Bush, S. Wahab
Year: 2000
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
771
The development of mental health services within primary care in India: learning from oral history
Type: Journal Article
Authors: N. van Ginneken, S. Jain, V. Patel, V. Berridge
Year: 2014
Publication Place: England
Abstract: BACKGROUND: In India very few of those who need mental health care receive it, despite efforts of the 1982 National Mental Health Programme and its district-level component the District Mental Health Programme (DMHP) to improve mental health care coverage. AIMS: To explore and unpack the political, cultural and other historical reasons for the DMHP's failures and successes since 1947 (post-independence era), which may highlight issues for today's current primary mental health care policy and programme. METHODS: Oral history interviews and documentary sourcing were conducted in 2010-11 with policy makers, programme managers and observers who had been active in the creation of the NMHP and DMHP. RESULTS: The results suggest that the widely held perception that the DMHP has failed is not entirely justified, insofar that major hurdles to the implementation of the plan have impacted on mental health coverage in primary care, rather than faults with the plan itself. These hurdles have been political neglect, inadequate leadership at central, state and district levels, inaccessible funding and improperly implemented delivery of services (including poor training, motivation and retention of staff) at district and community levels. CONCLUSION: At this important juncture as the 12th Five Year Plan is in preparation, this historical paper suggests that though the model may be improved, the most important changes would be to encourage central and state governments to implement better technical support, access to funds and to rethink the programme leadership at national, state and district levels.
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
773
The effect of adherence to practice guidelines on depression outcomes.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Kimberly A. Hepner, Melissa Rowe, Kathryn Rost, Scot C. Hickey, Cathy D. Sherbourne, Daniel E. Ford, Lisa S. Meredith, Lisa V. Rubenstein
Year: 2007
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
774
The effectiveness of Culturally Sensitive Collaborative Treatment of depressed Chinese in family medicine clinics: A randomized controlled trial
Type: Journal Article
Authors: H. C. Huang, S. I. Liu, L. C. Hwang, F. J. Sun, J. J. Tjung, C. R. Huang, T. C. Li, Y. P. Huang, A. Yeung
Year: 2018
Publication Place: United States
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
775
The effects of memory, attention, and executive dysfunction on outcomes of depression in a primary care intervention trial: The PROSPECT study
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Hillary R. Bogner, Martha L. Bruce, Reynolds Charles F. II, Benoit H. Mulsant, Mark S. Cary, Knashawn Morales, George S. Alexopoulos
Year: 2007
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
776
The effects of primary care depression treatment on patients' clinical status and employment
Type: Journal Article
Authors: M. Schoenbaum, J. Unutzer, D. McCaffrey, N. Duan, C. Sherbourne, K. B. Wells
Year: 2002
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
777
The effects of psychological treatment in primary care in Sweden--a practice-based study
Type: Journal Article
Authors: R. Holmqvist, T. Strom, A. Foldemo
Year: 2014
Publication Place: England
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Practice-based studies have found substantial effects of psychological treatment in routine care, often equivalent between treatment methods. Factors that moderate treatment outcome may be important to assess. AIM: The purpose of this study was to evaluate treatment outcome in psychological treatment in primary care, and to compare outcome between the most frequently used methods. An additional aim was to study factors that might moderate outcome differences. METHOD: The Clinical Outcome in Routine Evaluation (CORE) system was used to evaluate psychological treatment at Swedish primary care centers. Treatment methods were coded by the therapists after treatment. Three major treatment orientations-directive (cognitive, behavioral and CBT), reflective (psychodynamic and relational) and supportive therapy were compared. Patient and therapist variables were studied as treatment moderating factors. RESULTS: Analyses of 733 therapies, delivered by 70 therapists, showed good results in short psychological treatments (median session number = 6). Forty-three percent of the patients were remitted, 34% recovered. For patients receiving at least five sessions, the figures were 50% and 40%. Directive therapy and reflective therapy had comparable outcome, and better than supportive treatment. Patients in supportive therapy had higher age and received fewer therapy sessions. The patients' motivation, alliance capacity and reflective ability, as rated by the therapist after treatment, were lower for patients in supportive treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Psychological treatment in primary care obtains god results. Supportive therapy should be studied more systematically, particularly with regard to variables that may moderate treatment outcome.
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
779
The ethics of complex relationships in primary care behavioral health.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Jeff Reiter, Christine Runyan
Year: 2013
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
780
The failure of a controlled trial to improve depression care: a qualitative study
Type: Journal Article
Authors: L. R. Fischer, L. I. Solberg, K. M. Zander
Year: 2001
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection