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Primary care’s rising role in behavioral health requires specialty partnerships


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM AN NIHCM FOUNDATION WEBINAR

References

In March, the American Board of Medical Specialties helped elevate addiction medicine’s clinical status with the announcement that it will recognize addiction medicine as a subspecialty, sponsored by the American Board of Preventive Medicine. Although no date has been announced for the first certification exam, the ABMS move was reinforced by a recent Obama administration regulatory change that nearly triples the number of patients addiction specialists can see annually.

Pressure is also mounting on primary care providers to play a more active role in reversing the highest suicide rates in 3 decades. Although the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force concluded in 2014 the evidence is insufficient enough to endorse screening for suicide risk, study data show that in the month prior to their death by suicide, nearly half of people had seen their primary care provider at least once.

Partly in response to these data, the federal Center for Integrated Health Solutions has created a resource center for suicide prevention in primary care.

Partnerships inevitable

In an environment where high care costs directly impact reimbursement, physicians and insurers alike are motivated to “aggressively” seek an integrated approach to care, according to webinar panelist Charles Gross, PhD, vice president for behavioral health in Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield’s government affairs division.

“Doctors should be compensated for the hard work necessary to integrate care,” Dr. Gross said. “It’s not inexpensive. And also, they should be compensated for patient outcomes.”

Increasingly, provider membership contracts are tailored to a practice’s patient panel, the practice’s current level of integration, and its overall objectives, reinforced by metrics and the implementation of measurement-based care. Bundled care codes and other coding strategies are also being developed to support integrated care, according to Dr. Gross.

Whether it is through telemedicine, colocation, or developing referral networks, primary care physicians are in a position now where they must partner with mental health specialists.

“I don’t think more [training] on how to diagnose and treat mental health and substance abuse is going to be effective in primary care,” Dr. Gross cautioned. “That’s why we’ve really come down firmly on the side of the collaborative care model, based on the IMPACT study. That’s where we’re going.”

wmcknight@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @whitneymcknight

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