¶ … Primary Care
Beard, C., Weisberg, R.B., & Primack, J. (2012). Socially anxious primary care patients' attitudes toward cognitive bias modification (CBM): a qualitative study. Behavioural and cognitive psychotherapy, 40(05), 618-633.
This study shows how traditional methods of approaching patients with information can cause confusion and thus create barriers to accessing patient knowledge in primary care settings. The study focused on working with primary care patients suffering from anxiety and how they reacted to cognitive bias modification (CBM) for that anxiety. Upon initial discussion of the treatment, most participants showed that they understood. However, it was clear by the end of the treatment that the program was not clarified enough to patients prior to treatment and that created a knowledge barrier that caused the treatment not to work as successfully as previously tested. Better methods for communicating the treatment within the primary care setting must be developed to bring down these barriers.
Beckman, H.B., Wendland, M., Mooney, C., Krasner, M.S., Quill, T.E., Suchman, A.L., & Epstein, R.M. (2012). The impact of a program in mindful communication on primary care physicians. Academic Medicine, 87(6), 815-819.
Here, the authors explore how individual physicians can work to help facilitate greater care practices in their unique environments, despite the flaws in the current system. The researchers claim that when physicians are more satisfied with their job experience, they can serve as greater voices of change, thus helping the system evolve to better practices. The authors interviewed primary care physicians who had just attended a 52-hour communication program to reduce burn out on the job and increase empathy for patients. What the research discovered was that greater access to discussing their job with colleagues can increase satisfaction and ultimately help increase engagement in the field. Such increased devotion then helps generate physicians who are not just reactive, but proactive in helping tear down barriers to primary care in their own fields.
Cheung, P.T., Wiler, J.L., Lowe, R.A., & Ginde, A.A. (2012). National study of barriers to timely primary care and emergency department utilization among Medicaid beneficiaries. Annals of emergency medicine, 60(1), 4-10.
Unfortunately, access to quality does come at a high premium. Many patients who cannot afford private insurance have to depend on state run programs, like Medicare. Yet, this study clearly shows the barriers created by Medicare in accessing quality primary and emergency care. Often times, emergency wait times were much higher for Medicare patients when compared to private insurance options. Thus, Medicare patients are more negatively affected by the barriers put into place for primary and emergency care.
Crabtree, B.F., Nutting, P.A., Miller, W.L., McDaniel, R.R., Stange, K.C., Jaen, C.R., & Stewart, E. (2011). Primary care practice transformation is hard work: insights from a 15-year developmental program of research. Medical care, 49(Suppl), S28.
This research used a survey method to review 15 years of data regarding improvement strategies for enhancing clinical performance in the primary care setting. According to the study, interventions that intervention strategies that use complexity science methods can help strengthen the success of intervention methods. This views different elements of the primary care health facility as individual agents. Thus, a complexity systems perspective helps create synergy within each of the agents, including patient knowledge. Thus, treating this unique agent with evidence-based practices can help increase the ability for the transfer of knowledge to patients.
HERT, M., Cohen, D., Bobes, J., CETKOVICH-BAKMAS, M.A.R.C.E.L.O., Leucht, S., Ndetei, D.M., ... & Correll, C.U. (2011). Physical illness in patients with severe mental disorders. II. Barriers to care, monitoring and treatment guidelines, plus recommendations at the system and individual level. World Psychiatry, 10(2), 138-151.
Individuals with mental health challenges often face barriers to care like no other field in medicine. Yet, there are more sensitive needs regarding both physical and mental disorders within such populations, making these individuals have a greater need for effective primary care. Barriers unfortunately leave many without the care they need, especially in regards to medical costs. Often times, such patients fail to receive the same type of preventative screenings and monitoring of physical conditions because of control and monetary factors. This current research explores the unique barriers to primary care experienced by patients with severe mental illness (SMI). The paper concludes with a proposition of encouraging psychiatrists and other mental health professionals to extend their services to include such physical screenings as well as other psychiatric services. This would ultimately...
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