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Sleep Medicine: Can We Regain Lost Ground?

Sleep Medicine: Can We Regain Lost Ground? Angelos Halaris, M.D., Ph.D. Professor and Chairman and Sinan Baran, M.D. Medical Director, Sleep Disorders Center Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior University of Mississippi Medical Center Sleep Medicine Subspecialty of: Psychiatry

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Sleep Medicine: Can We Regain Lost Ground?

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  1. Sleep Medicine: Can We Regain Lost Ground? Angelos Halaris, M.D., Ph.D. Professor and Chairman and Sinan Baran, M.D. Medical Director, Sleep Disorders Center Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior University of Mississippi Medical Center

  2. Sleep MedicineSubspecialty of: • Psychiatry • Neurology • Pulmonary Medicine • Internal Medicine • Pediatrics • Psychology • Other

  3. Historical Perspective Psychiatrists were drawn to sleep research in the past because of interest in REM sleep and dreaming.

  4. Decreased Interest in Sleep Medicine by Psychiatrists

  5. New Diplomates of the American Board of Sleep Medicine in 2001: Pulmonologists 135 Neurologists 39 Other 18 Internists 6 Psychologists 2 Psychiatrists 0

  6. Total Diplomates of the American Board of Sleep Medicine # % • Pulmonologists 901 53.0 • Neurologists 433 25.5 • Psychologists 112 6.6 • Psychiatrists 110 6.5 • Internists 44 2.6 • Other 99 5.8 1699

  7. Possible Reasons for Decreased Interest in Sleep Medicine by Psychiatrists • Sleep Medicine has become more general medical and less psychiatric: • Current emphasis on sleep-disordered breathing • Domination of field by pulmonologists • Perception of isolation or detachment from • mainstream psychiatry?

  8. Why Should Psychiatrists Consider Subspecializing in Sleep Medicine? • Professional diversity • Psychiatric training of great value in the evaluation of all patients with sleep complaints • more comprehensive approach • increased sensitivity to contributing psychiatric factors including medication effects • Insomnia: the most difficult presenting complaint • Circadian rhythms

  9. Obstructive Sleep Apnea • Should not discourage psychiatrists from becoming involved with sleep medicine • Upper airway obstruction during sleep • CPAP acts as a splint to “prop open” the upper airway • A relatively “fun” and easy problem (for the appropriately trained physician) to diagnose and treat, though there are subtleties • CPAP compliance issues well suited for psychiatrists

  10. Obstructive Sleep Apnea • “Meat and potatoes” of sleep medicine • Majority of cases referred to a sleep center BUT • There are many other interesting cases sprinkled in to spice things up

  11. Domination of Sleep Medicine by Pulmonologists is Without Scientific Basis • OSA is not a pulmonary disorder • Pulmonologists are not inherently more qualified to treat OSA • CPAP/BiPAP treatment of OSA does not require a pulmonologist

  12. Comorbidity of Sleep and Psychiatric Disorders • Mood d/o can present with insomnia as chief complaint • Primary sleep d/o can have psychiatric symptoms: • affective • pseudo-psychotic • anxiety • Coincidental concurrence of sleep and psychiatric disorders: • special patient needs

  13. PSG Patients taking Psychotropic Medications at UMMC 25.86% of 1106 patients: Antidepressants 22.97 % Mood stabilizers 1.45 % Antipsychotics 4.50 % Buspirone 1.27 % Clomipramine 0.18 % (4.89% on more than one class of medication)

  14. Practical Matters • Typical Practice of Sleep Medicine • Training • Board Certification • Developing a Sleep Disorders Center • Developing a Sleep Medicine Fellowship • Referrals • Reimbursement

  15. Typical Practice of Sleep Medicine • History and (focused) physical exam • Interpretation of PSG • visual pattern recognition skills

  16. Training in Sleep Medicine • Formal 1-2 year fellowship following residency • accredited by AASM • non-accredited • Formal training + Clinical experience

  17. Board Certification by American Academy of Sleep Medicine • ABSM not recognized by ABMS • AMA self-designated medical specialty • Candidate for subspecialty of ABPN?

  18. Board Certification by American Academy of Sleep Medicine • Must 1st complete ACGME accredited residency or its equivalent prior to sleep training • Currently, several options and waivers to qualify • 2005: training must be in AASM accredited fellowship program to qualify for exam

  19. Components of a Sleep Disorders Center • Sleep specialist • Technical staff • Chief technologist • maximum 2:1 patient to technologist ratio • mainly night shift work • Secretarial staff • key issue: booking/maintaining PSG schedule • Facility/Hardware • Rooms • Computerized (“paperless”) systems • Infrastructure

  20. Accreditation of Center • ABSM certified or “eligible” physician • PSG technologists • Chief technologist preferably certified by BPSGT • 3rd party reimbursement implications

  21. Accreditation of Fellowship • Accredited Center • Clinical exposure: • volume • breadth • Formal academic curriculum

  22. Referrals • Initial office evaluation prior to consideration of PSG for most patients • Direct PSG referral only available to physicians with some experience with sleep disorders • report must be reviewed and approved by sleep specialist prior to PSG

  23. Reimbursement for Sleep Procedures in MS: Professional Fee Procedure BC/BS Medicare Medicaid PSG 164.00 124.53 164.88 PSG/CPAP 175.00 133.69 176.64 MSLT 71.20 69.76 73.63

  24. Reimbursement for Sleep Procedures in MS: Technical Fee Procedure BC/BS Medicare Medicaid PSG 531.00 484.35 528.94 PSG/CPAP 533.00 490.39 547.81 MSLT 309.00 165.15 280.67

  25. Relations with Neurology and Pulmonary Medicine • Appropriate referral (not for sleep disorders) • seizures during sleep • intrinsic lung disease • In multidisciplinary sleep centers: • psychiatrists should maintain exposure to all sleep disorders • avoid pitfall of receiving only psychiatric referrals

  26. Additional Information • American Board of Sleep Medicine: www.absm.org • American Academy of Sleep Medicine: www.aasmnet.org • Board of Registered Polysomnographic Technologists: www.brpt.org • Association of Polysomnographic Technologists: www.aptweb.org

  27. www.aasmnet.org

  28. www.aasmnet.org

  29. Conclusions • Sleep medicine is not just about OSA, but OSA can be satisfying for psychiatrists to diagnose and treat • Psychiatrists can practice the full spectrum of Sleep Medicine and are particularly well suited for cases of psychiatric comorbidity • An active, full-service sleep disorders center can function well within and enhance a department of psychiatry

  30. Recommendations • Educate psychiatrists about sleep medicine and the need for psychiatry to increase its visibility and involvement (through APA) • increase activity at psychiatric conferences • increase sleep-related publications in psychiatric journals (rather than focus on Sleep Medicine journals) • Mandate a rotation in sleep medicine for general psychiatry residents (off-site if in-house sleep lab not present)

  31. Recommendations (cont.) • Consider sleep medicine a subspecialty of ABPN • AACDP to develop a consulting mechanism to assist departments of psychiatry in developing sleep laboratories and fellowships • Provide community education about sleep disorders spearheaded by psychiatrists with expertise in sleep medicine

  32. Sleep Medicine at the University of Mississippi Medical Center(UMMC) • A full-service center that diagnoses and treats all sleep disorders • Established 1980’s in the Department of Psychiatry • Currently on staff: • 4 physicians (1 full-time) certified by ABPN and ABSM • 5 polysomnographic technologists

  33. UMMC Sleep Disorders Center: Credentials • One of 368 Sleep Disorders Centers accredited by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine • One of 21 Sleep Medicine training programs accredited by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine

  34. Sleep Studies in 2001 Academic Year • Nocturnal Polysomnogram 687 • Multiple Sleep Latency Test* 8 • indicated in evaluation of narcolepsy or when quantification of daytime sleepiness is required

  35. Referral Patterns • Internal Medicine • Family Medicine • Pulmonary Medicine • Pediatrics • Otolaryngology • Psychiatry

  36. Training • Full-time fellowship position (1-2 year) • 1-2 month elective rotations for residents/fellows from following departments: • Psychiatry • Neurology • Pulmonology • Internal Medicine

  37. Patient Population • Adult 76 % • Pediatric 24 %

  38. Patient Distribution 68% Sleep-disordered Breathing 11% Periodic Limb Movement Disorder/Restless Legs Syndrome 10% Insomnia 7% Narcolepsy 2% Parasomnias

  39. Obstructive Sleep Apnea • Should not discourage psychiatrists from becoming involved with sleep medicine • Upper airway obstruction during sleep • CPAP acts as a splint to “prop open” the upper airway • A relatively “fun” and easy problem (for the appropriately trained physician) to diagnose and treat, though there are subtleties • CPAP compliance issues well suited for psychiatrists

  40. Obstructive Sleep Apnea • “Meat and potatoes” of sleep medicine • Majority of cases referred to a sleep center BUT • There are many other types of interesting cases sprinkled in to spice things up • narcolepsy • parasomnias • insomnia

  41. Domination of Sleep Medicine by Pulmonologists is Without Scientific Basis • OSA is not a pulmonary disorder • Pulmonologists are not inherently more qualified to treat OSA • CPAP/BiPAP treatment of OSA does not require a pulmonologist

  42. Conclusions • Sleep medicine is not just about OSA, but OSA can be satisfying for psychiatrists to diagnose and treat • Psychiatrists can practice the full spectrum of Sleep Medicine and are particularly well suited for cases of psychiatric comorbidity • An active, full-service sleep disorders center can function well within and enhance a department of psychiatry

  43. Recommendations • Educate psychiatrists about sleep medicine and the need for psychiatry to increase its visibility and involvement (through APA) • increase activity at psychiatric conferences • increase sleep-related publications in psychiatric journals (rather than focus on Sleep Medicine journals) • Mandate a rotation in sleep medicine for general psychiatry residents (off-site if in-house sleep lab not present)

  44. Recommendations (cont.) • Declare sleep medicine a subspecialty of ABPN • AACDP to develop a consulting mechanism to assist departments of psychiatry in developing sleep laboratories and fellowships • Provide community education about sleep disorders spearheaded by psychiatrists with expertise in sleep medicine

  45. Results

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