TY - JOUR
T1 - Using vignettes to assess contributions to the work of addressing child mental health problems in primary care
AU - Wissow, Lawrence S.
AU - Zafar, Waleed
AU - Fothergill, Kate
AU - Ruble, Anne
AU - Slade, Eric
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to to the Maryland Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, its members, and its executive director, Ms. Paula Minsk, for facilitating the survey. Ms. Shaina Longway and Ms. Heather Winegrad prepared the survey for delivery in its web-based form and provided other technical assistance. The authors'' work was supported by NIMH grant P20 MH086048, Center for Mental Health in Pediatric Primary Care. The authors also acknowledge the contribution of the Center''s Community Advisory Committee, chaired by Dr. Janice Bowie, for review of several early versions of the survey. This article was prepared while Dr. Fothergill was employed at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. The opinions expressed in this article are the authors'' own and do not reflect the view of the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Health and Human Services, or the United States government.
Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to to the Maryland Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, its members, and its executive director, Ms. Paula Minsk, for facilitating the survey. Ms. Shaina Longway and Ms. Heather Winegrad prepared the survey for delivery in its web-based form and provided other technical assistance. The authors’ work was supported by NIMH grant P20 MH086048, Center for Mental Health in Pediatric Primary Care. The authors also acknowledge the contribution of the Center’s Community Advisory Committee, chaired by Dr. Janice Bowie, for review of several early versions of the survey. This article was prepared while Dr. Fothergill was employed at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. The opinions expressed in this article are the authors’ own and do not reflect the view of the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Health and Human Services, or the United States government.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Wissow et al.
PY - 2016/1/22
Y1 - 2016/1/22
N2 - Background: To further efforts to integrate mental health and primary care, this study develops a novel approach to quantifying the amount and sources of work involved in shifting care for common mental health problems to pediatric primary care providers. Methods: Email/web-based survey of a convenience sample (n = 58) of Maryland pediatricians (77 % female, 58 % at their site 10 or more years; 44 % in private practice, 52 % urban, 48 % practicing with a co-located mental health provider). Participants were asked to review 11 vignettes, which described primary care management of child/youth mental health problems, and rate them on an integer-based ordinal scale for the overall amount of work involved compared to a 12th reference vignette describing an uncomplicated case of ADHD. Respondents were also asked to indicate factors (time, effort, stress) accounting for their ratings. Vignettes presented combinations of three diagnoses (ADHD, anxiety, and depression) and three factors (medical co-morbidity, psychiatric co-morbidity, and difficult families) reported to complicate mental health care. The reference case was pre-assigned a work value of 2. Estimates of the relationship of diagnosis and complicating factors with workload were obtained using linear regression, with random effects at the respondent level. Results: The 58 pediatricians gave 593 vignette responses. Depression was associated with a 1.09 unit (about 50 %) increase in work (95 % CL.94, 1.25), while anxiety did not differ significantly from the reference case of uncomplicated ADHD (p = .28). Although all three complicating factors increased work ratings compared with the reference case, family complexity and psychiatric co-morbidity did so the most (.87 and 1.07 units, respectively, P < .001) while medical co-morbidity increased it the least (.44 units, p < .001). Factors most strongly associated with increased overall work were physician time, physician mental effort, and stress; those least strongly associated were staff time, physician physical effort, and malpractice risk. Pediatricians working with co-located mental health providers gave higher work ratings than did those without co-located staff. Conclusions: Both diagnosis and cross-diagnosis complicating factors contribute to the work involved in providing mental health services in primary care. Vignette studies may facilitate understanding which mental health services can be most readily incorporated into primary care as it is presently structured and help guide the design of training programs and other implementation strategies.
AB - Background: To further efforts to integrate mental health and primary care, this study develops a novel approach to quantifying the amount and sources of work involved in shifting care for common mental health problems to pediatric primary care providers. Methods: Email/web-based survey of a convenience sample (n = 58) of Maryland pediatricians (77 % female, 58 % at their site 10 or more years; 44 % in private practice, 52 % urban, 48 % practicing with a co-located mental health provider). Participants were asked to review 11 vignettes, which described primary care management of child/youth mental health problems, and rate them on an integer-based ordinal scale for the overall amount of work involved compared to a 12th reference vignette describing an uncomplicated case of ADHD. Respondents were also asked to indicate factors (time, effort, stress) accounting for their ratings. Vignettes presented combinations of three diagnoses (ADHD, anxiety, and depression) and three factors (medical co-morbidity, psychiatric co-morbidity, and difficult families) reported to complicate mental health care. The reference case was pre-assigned a work value of 2. Estimates of the relationship of diagnosis and complicating factors with workload were obtained using linear regression, with random effects at the respondent level. Results: The 58 pediatricians gave 593 vignette responses. Depression was associated with a 1.09 unit (about 50 %) increase in work (95 % CL.94, 1.25), while anxiety did not differ significantly from the reference case of uncomplicated ADHD (p = .28). Although all three complicating factors increased work ratings compared with the reference case, family complexity and psychiatric co-morbidity did so the most (.87 and 1.07 units, respectively, P < .001) while medical co-morbidity increased it the least (.44 units, p < .001). Factors most strongly associated with increased overall work were physician time, physician mental effort, and stress; those least strongly associated were staff time, physician physical effort, and malpractice risk. Pediatricians working with co-located mental health providers gave higher work ratings than did those without co-located staff. Conclusions: Both diagnosis and cross-diagnosis complicating factors contribute to the work involved in providing mental health services in primary care. Vignette studies may facilitate understanding which mental health services can be most readily incorporated into primary care as it is presently structured and help guide the design of training programs and other implementation strategies.
KW - Children
KW - Collaborative care
KW - Mental health
KW - Primary care
KW - Survey
KW - Task shifting
KW - Vignettes
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U2 - 10.1186/s12913-015-1237-x
DO - 10.1186/s12913-015-1237-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 26801906
AN - SCOPUS:84960499427
SN - 1472-6963
VL - 15
JO - BMC Health Services Research
JF - BMC Health Services Research
IS - 1
M1 - 584
ER -