PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New collaborative care model offers help for patients with mental health need

Addressing common challenges in the implementation of collaborative care for mental health: The Penn integrated care program

2021-03-09
(Press-News.org) Members of the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and its health system developed and implemented a new model of collaborative care called The Penn Integrated Care (PIC) program. PIC includes a resource center to support intake, triage and referral management and collaborative care services in primary care practices. PIC was created to increase access to and engagement with mental health professionals to improve mental and physical health outcomes. Primary care physicians were able to refer patients with any mental health symptom or condition to PIC. In 12 months, 6,124 unique patients were referred from eight primary care clinics to either the PIC Resource Center or were connected with a mental health professional. Most were triaged to collaborative care or specialty health care with active referral management.

Among patients enrolled in collaborative care, the mean length of treatment was 7.2 encounters over 78 days. Remission of symptoms was achieved by almost 33 percent of patients with depression and almost 40 percent of patients with anxiety. Stakeholders viewed the program favorably. Primary care physicians perceived they were providing patients with higher quality care, and patients appreciated having someone to talk to in addition to, or instead of, receiving a medication prescription. Results provide insight into a model for launching and implementing collaborative care to meet the needs of a diverse group of patients who have a full range of mental health conditions often seen in primary care.

INFORMATION:

Addressing Common Challenges in the Implementation of Collaborative Care for Mental Health: The Penn Integrated Care Program Courtney Benjamin Wolk, PhD, et al University of Pennsylvania, Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania https://www.annfammed.org/content/19/2/135



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How the South African COVID-19 variant was found

How the South African COVID-19 variant was found
2021-03-09
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- Variants of the coronavirus are appearing in different parts of the world, many of them spreading with alarming speed. One contagious variant is the South African, or SA, variant, identified by an international team of researchers, including biomedical scientists from the University of California, Riverside. "The new COVID-19 variants are the next new frontier," said Adam Godzik, a professor of biomedical sciences in the UC Riverside School of Medicine and a member of the research team that made the discovery. "Of these, the ...

Immune cell implicated in development of lung disease following viral infection

Immune cell implicated in development of lung disease following viral infection
2021-03-09
Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have implicated a type of immune cell in the development of chronic lung disease that sometimes is triggered following a respiratory viral infection. The evidence suggests that activation of this immune cell -- a type of guardian cell called a dendritic cell -- serves as an early switch that, when activated, sets in motion a chain of events that drives progressive lung diseases, including asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The new study, published in The Journal of Immunology, opens the door to potential preventive ...

Rising antiparasitic drug cost in U.S. leads to higher patient costs, decreased quality of care

2021-03-09
New study finds the skyrocketing cost of drugs in U.S. used to treat hookworm and other soil-transmitted parasites increases patient costs, suggests decreased quality of care A new study finds that the increasingly high prices in the United States of the drugs used to treat three soil-transmitted helminth infections--hookworm, roundworm (ascariasis), and whipworm (trichuriasis)--is not only the major driver for the increase in costs to patients with either Medicaid or private insurance, but it also may have a damaging impact on the quality-of-care patients receive as clinicians shift their prescribing patterns to more affordable yet less-effective medicines covered ...

Integration analysis of m6A regulators and m6A-related genes in hepatocellular carcinoma

2021-03-09
https://doi.org/10.15212/bioi-2021-0002 Announcing a new article publication for BIO Integration journal. In this article the authors Jingdun Xie, Zhenhua Qi, Xiaolin Luo, Fang Yan, Wei Xing, Weian Zeng, Dongtai Chen and Qiang Li; from Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China discuss integration analysis of m6A regulators and m6A-related genes in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). N6-Methyladenosine (m6A) RNA methylation of eukaryotic mRNA is involved in the progression of various tumors. This study comprehensively analyzed m6A regulators and m6A-related genes through an integrated bioinformatic analysis, ...

Big shift seen in high-risk older adults' attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination

Big shift seen in high-risk older adults attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination
2021-03-09
Last fall, nearly half of older adults were on the fence about COVID-19 vaccination - or at least taking a wait-and-see attitude, according to a University of Michigan poll taken at the time. But a new follow-up poll shows that 71% of people in their 50s, 60s and 70s are now ready to get vaccinated against COVID-19 when a dose becomes available to them, or had already gotten vaccinated by the time they were polled in late January. That's up from 58% in October. Three groups of older adults with especially high risk of severe COVID-19 -- Blacks, Hispanics and people in fair or poor health - had even bigger jumps in vaccine receptiveness between October and late January. The poll shows a 20-point jump in just ...

Real world data reveal risks of allergic reactions after receiving COVID-19 mRNA vaccines

2021-03-09
BOSTON - Almost immediately after the first mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines were authorized for emergency use and were administered to individuals outside of clinical trials, reports of anaphylaxis--a life-threatening whole-body allergic reaction--raised widespread concerns among experts and the public. Now, real world data on vaccinations among employees at Mass General Brigham provide reassurances of the rarity of such serious reactions, and the ability to recover from them. The findings are published in the END ...

Study: Prisoners with mental illness much more likely to be placed in solitary confinement

2021-03-09
Past studies on whether incarcerated people with mental illness are more likely to be placed in solitary confinement have yielded mixed results. A new study examined the issue in one state's prisons, taking into account factors related to incarcerated men and the facilities where they were imprisoned. It found that having a mental illness was associated with a significant increase in the likelihood of being placed in extended solitary confinement. The study, by researchers at Florida State University (FSU), appears in Justice Quarterly, a publication of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. "Our findings provide new information on how mental illness shapes experiences for incarcerated men, and more broadly, on how the criminal justice ...

Electrochemistry opens ways for the sustainable production of sulfonamides

2021-03-09
A research team at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) in Germany has developed a completely new, environmentally-friendly electrochemical procedure for producing sulfonamides rapidly and inexpensively. Sulfonamides are used in many drugs including antibiotics and Viagra as well as in agrochemicals and dyes, which makes them an important class of molecules for the pharmaceutical and chemical industries. While to date it has been necessary to use corrosive chemicals, high temperatures, and expensive metal catalysts to produce sulfonamides, the new method requires ...

Warming climate slows tropical birds' population growth rates

Warming climate slows tropical birds population growth rates
2021-03-09
The mountain forests of Tanzania are more than 9,300 miles away from Salt Lake City, Utah. But, as in eastern Africa, the wild places of Utah depend on a diversity of birds to spread seeds, eat pests and clean up carrion. Birds keep ecosystems healthy. So if birds in Tanzania are in trouble in a warming climate, as found in a recent study by University of Utah researchers, people in Utah as well as in the African tropics should pay attention. In a new study published in Global Change Biology, doctoral student Monte Neate-Clegg and colleagues tracked the demographics of 21 bird species over 30 years of observations from a mountain forest in Tanzania. For at least six of the species, their population declined over ...

Study finds brain's 'wiring insulation' as major factor of age-related brain deterioration

Study finds brains wiring insulation as major factor of age-related brain deterioration
2021-03-09
A new study led by the University of Portsmouth has identified that one of the major factors of age-related brain deterioration is the loss of a substance called myelin. Myelin acts like the protective and insulating plastic casing around the electrical wires of the brain - called axons. Myelin is essential for superfast communication between nerve cells that lie behind the supercomputer power of the human brain. The loss of myelin results in cognitive decline and is central to several neurodegenerative diseases, such as Multiple Sclerosis and Alzheimer's disease. This new study found that the cells that drive myelin repair become less efficient as we age and identified a key gene that is most affected by ageing, which reduces the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Self-destructing vaccine offers enhanced protection against tuberculosis in monkeys

Feeding your good gut bacteria through fiber in diet may boost body against infections

Sustainable building components create a good indoor climate

High levels of disordered eating among young people linked to brain differences

Hydrogen peroxide and the mystery of fruit ripening: ‘Signal messengers’ in plants

T cells’ capability to fully prevent acute viral infections opens new avenues for vaccine development

Study suggests that magma composition drives volcanic tremor

Sea surface temperatures and deeper water temperatures reached a new record high in 2024

Connecting through culture: Understanding its relevance in intercultural lingua franca communication

Men more than three times as likely to die from a brain injury, new US study shows

Tongue cancer organoids reveal secrets of chemotherapy resistance

Applications, limitations, and prospects of different muscle atrophy models in sarcopenia and cachexia research

FIFAWC: A dataset with detailed annotation and rich semantics for group activity recognition

Transfer learning-enhanced physics-informed neural network (TLE-PINN): A breakthrough in melt pool prediction for laser melting

Holistic integrative medicine declaration

Hidden transport pathways in graphene confirmed, paving the way for next-generation device innovation

New Neurology® Open Access journal announced

Gaza: 64,000 deaths due to violence between October 2023 and June 2024, analysis suggests

Study by Sylvester, collaborators highlights global trends in risk factors linked to lung cancer deaths

Oil extraction might have triggered small earthquakes in Surrey

Launch of world’s most significant protein study set to usher in new understanding for medicine

New study from Chapman University reveals rapid return of water from ground to atmosphere through plants

World's darkest and clearest skies at risk from industrial megaproject

UC Irvine-led discovery of new skeletal tissue advances regenerative medicine potential

Pulse oximeters infrequently tested by manufacturers on diverse sets of subjects

Press Registration is open for the 2025 AAN Annual Meeting

New book connects eugenics to Big Tech

Electrifying your workout can boost muscles mass, strength, UTEP study finds

Renewed grant will continue UTIA’s integrated pest management program

Researchers find betrayal doesn’t necessarily make someone less trustworthy if we benefit

[Press-News.org] New collaborative care model offers help for patients with mental health need
Addressing common challenges in the implementation of collaborative care for mental health: The Penn integrated care program