230 likes | 447 Views
Evidence-Based Treatment for First Episode Psychosis. Robert K. Heinssen, Ph.D., ABPP Amy B. Goldstein, Ph.D Susan T. Azrin, Ph.D. July 28, 2014. Disclosures. I have no personal financial relationships with commercial interests relevant to this presentation
E N D
Evidence-Based Treatment for First Episode Psychosis Robert K. Heinssen, Ph.D., ABPP Amy B. Goldstein, Ph.D Susan T. Azrin, Ph.D. July 28, 2014
Disclosures • I have no personal financial relationships with commercial interests relevant to this presentation • The views expressed are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of the NIH, NIMH, or the Federal Government
Early Intervention Principles • Early detection of psychosis • Rapid access to specialty care • Recovery focus • Youth friendly services • Respectful of clients’ autonomy & independence
Early Intervention Services • Team-based, phase-specific treatment • Assertive outreach and engagement • Empirically-supported interventions • Low-dose antipsychotic medications • Cognitive and behavioral psychotherapy • Family education and support • Educational and vocational rehabilitation • Shared decision-making framework
Evidence-based Treatments for First Episode Psychosis: Components of Coordinated Specialty Care • RAISE Early Treatment Program Manuals and Program Resources • OnTrackNY Manuals & Program Resources • RAISE Coordinated Specialty Care for First Episode Psychosis Manuals • Voices of Recovery Video Series http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/schizophrenia/raise/coordinated-specialty-care-for-first-episode-psychosis-resources.shtml
Must I hire 6 new FEP specialists? • In the RAISE initiative, clinicians from multiple disciplines learned, mastered, and applied the principles of CSC • Many providers achieved competency in more than one CSC function, and fulfilled dual roles on the treatment team • Many sites leveraged existing resources to create cost efficiencies that supported the CSC program
CSC Team Model 1 Suburban Mental Health Center; 20-25 Clients Clinical Roles Percent Full Time Employee
CSC Team Model 2 Urban Mental Health Center; 25-30 Clients Clinical Roles Percent Full Time Employee
Revising the FY14 MHBG Plan • Depending on current capacity and set-aside amount: • Expand or augment existing CSC services • Fill gaps to create at least one operational program • Create infrastructure for a future CSC program
Revising the FY14 MHBG Plan • Consider targeted investments to build core CSC capacities • Shared decision making tools and training • Supported employment specialists • Regional collaborations to build FEP expertise
Goals for FY2015 and Beyond • Achieve and maintain fidelity to CSC model • Benchmark and monitor key quality indicators • Duration of untreated psychosis • Client retention at 3 months • Inpatient episodes, ED visits, crisis intervention • Academic, vocational, and social recovery • Health risk factors and medical comorbidities • All cause mortality (suicide behaviors, accidents, etc.) • Connect CSC programs into a “learning community” that shares expertise, resources, and quality monitoring data
FEP Learning Healthcare System FY2015 • Science and informatics • Patient-clinician partnerships • Incentives aligned for value • Feedback loops for ongoing system improvement • Culture of continuous learning
WA ME MT ND VT OR MN NH ID SD WI MA NY CT MI RI WY IA PA NJ NE NV OH IL IN DE UT MD WV CA CO VA KS MO KY NC TN AZ OK SC NM AR MS AL GA LA TX FL Thank you RAISE partners! 2 Studies 22 States 36 Sites 134 Providers 469 Participants
RAISE Principal Investigators • RAISE Early Treatment Program • RAISE Connection Program • John Kane • Nina Schooler • Delbert Robinson • Lisa Dixon • Susan Essock • Jeffery Lieberman
For More Information • www.nimh.nih.gov/RAISE • rheinsse@mail.nih.gov