This study evaluates the effectiveness of a collaborative care model designed to treat frail seniors with both a mental (anxiety and/or depression) and a physical health condition impacting function with a comparison group that receives a psychiatric mood consult and a letter of recommendation but who are mainly cared for by their PCP.
Literature suggests seniors with co-existing mental and physical health concerns encounter challenges with accessing care including limited availability of geriatric specialists, inadequate navigational support, disjointed communication, and limited provider knowledge/ capacity to manage these complex patients. In conjunction with primary care, a new program was created to assist in addressing these concerns. A novel collaborative care model was developed integrating Geriatric Medicine and Geriatric Psychiatry anchored in primary care, where primary care remains the most responsible provider. Care managers (CMs) work with seniors in the community, for up to 16 weeks, who have at least one chronic health condition affecting function and depressed mood and/or anxiety. The care model focusses on 4 main components: integrated therapeutic care management, systematic case reviews (SCRs), integrated care planning, and education/capacity building. CMs provide comprehensive assessments, system navigation, monitoring using symptom rating scales, and a problem solving psychotherapy for seniors using reward exposure to form action plans (ENGAGE). CMs present cases weekly at SCRs, where the team includes a geriatrician, geriatric psychiatrist, primary care, and allied health. Recommendations are made then sent to the PCP for implementation. In the current evaluation study we will compare levels of depression, anxiety and functioning of seniors receiving the collaborative care model with those receiving a one time mood consultation.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
13
Trained care managers (CM) work collaboratively with patients, caregivers, and primary care providers to provide education, care navigation and behavioral activation. The latter includes a stepped psychotherapy intervention called ENGAGE, that focuses on "reward exposure" engagement in meaningful, rewarding activities for patients. Patients (home) visits are delivered over a period of 6 to 16 weeks. Progress is assessed with standardized measures for depression (PHQ-9), anxiety (GAD-7) and functioning (WHO-DAS). Furthermore, patients are presented by the CM at Systematic Case Review meetings where an integrated team of medical, psychiatric and allied health professionals work collaboratively to review the patient's goals and treatment to formulate a care plan and recommendations.
A meeting with a psychiatrist to do assessment, provide education and make recommendations regarding the care of the patient for the Primary Care Provider.
Trillium Health Partners
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Change in Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) from baseline to 12 months after discharge
The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) is a 9-item questionnaire that is used for screening, diagnosing, monitoring, and measuring the severity of depression. Each item can be answered on a 4 point scale running from 0= 'not at all' to 3= 'nearly every day'. The total score ranges from 0-27 where 0 is no depression and 27 is severe depression.
Time frame: Baseline to 12 months after discharge
Change in Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item (GAD-7) from baseline to 12 months
The Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item (GAD-7) is a 7-item questionnaire that is used for screening, diagnosing, monitoring, and measuring the severity of anxiety. Each item can be answered on a 4 point scale running from 0= 'not at all sure' to 3= 'nearly every day'. The total score ranges from 0-21 where 0 is no anxiety and 27 is severe anxiety.
Time frame: Baseline to 12 months after discharge
Change in World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 (WHODAS) from baseline to 12 months
The WHODAS is a practical generic assessment instrument that is used to measure health and disability. The WHODAS captures level of functioning in six domains: cognition, mobility, self-care, getting along and life activities. The 12-item questionnaire version asks about difficulties due to patient health conditions. Patients answer 12 questions within the 6 domains and select the best option of 5 answer categories: 1=none, 2=mild, 3=moderate, 4=severe, 5=extreme or cannot do. The total sum of the questions range between 12-60. and is than divided by 12 to determine where the patient falls on "none to extreme or cannot do" (range 1-5) scale .
Time frame: Baseline to 12 months after discharge
Patient satisfaction with care
The question that will be asked is: 1) I think the services provided at CAMH/THP were of high quality. The answer category is a 5-point likert rating scale running form 5=strongly agree to 0=strongly disagree. Score range 0= not at all satisfied to 5= very satisfied.
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.
Time frame: 12 months after discharge
Healthcare Utilization in the previous 3 months
The participants will be asked 6 questions about if the participant has seen a family physician, social worker, psychiatrist, psychologist and/or visited the emergency department and/or has been admitted to the hospital in the past 3 months. The number of health care providers seen will be summed to a total score that ranges from 0-6 where 0 represents no health care utilization and 6 represent high healthcare utilization.
Time frame: 12 months after discharge