7 results on '"Christina M. van der Feltz-Cornelis"'
Search Results
2. The Depression Initiative. Description of a collaborative care model for depression and of the factors influencing its implementation in the primary care setting in the Netherlands
- Author
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Fransina J. de Jong, Kirsten M. van Steenbergen-Weijenburg, Klaas M.L. Huijbregts, Moniek C. Vlasveld, Harm W.J. Van Marwijk, Aartjan T.F. Beekman, and Christina M. van der Feltz-Cornelis
- Subjects
primary care ,integrated care ,collaborative care ,major depressive disorder ,policy ,implementation ,health care system ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background: In the Depression Initiative, a promising collaborative care model for depression that was developed in the US was adapted for implementation in the Netherlands. Aim: Description of a collaborative care model for major depressive disorder (MDD) and of the factors influencing its implementation in the primary care setting in the Netherlands. Data sources: Data collected during the preparation phase of the CC:DIP trial of the Depression Initiative, literature, policy documents, information sheets from professional associations. Results: Factors facilitating the implementation of the collaborative care model are continuous supervision of the care managers by the consultant psychiatrist and the trainers, a supportive web-based tracking system and the new reimbursement system that allows for introduction of a mental health care-practice nurse (MHC-PN) in the general practices and coverage of the treatment costs. Impeding factors might be the relatively high percentage of solo-primary care practices, the small percentage of professionals that are located in the same building, unfamiliarity with the concept of collaboration as required for collaborative care, the reimbursement system that demands regular negotiations between each health care provider and the insurance companies and the reluctance general practitioners might feel to expand their responsibility for their depressed patients. Conclusion: Implementation of the collaborative care model in the Netherlands requires extensive training and supervision on micro level, facilitation of reimbursement on meso- and macro level and structural effort to change the treatment culture for chronic mental disorders in the primary care setting.
- Published
- 2009
3. Treatment of mental disorder in the primary care setting in the Netherlands in the light of the new reimbursement system: a challenge?
- Author
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Christina M. van der Feltz-Cornelis, Aafje Knispel, and Iman Elfeddali
- Subjects
mental disorder ,primary care ,collaborative care ,professional responsibilities ,integrated care ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Introduction: Different professionals provide health care for mental disorder in the primary care setting. In view of the changing reimbursement system in the Netherlands, information is needed on their specific expertise. Method: This study attempts to describe this by literature study, by assessment of expert opinions, and by consulting Associations of the relevant professions. Results: There is no clear differentiation of expertise and tasks amongst these professionals in primary care. Notably, distinction between different psychotherapeutic treatment modes provided by psychologists is unclear. Discussion: Research is needed to assess actual treatment modules in correlation with patient diagnostic classification for the different professions in primary care. An alternative way of classifying patients, that takes into account not only mental disorder or problems but especially the level of functioning, is proposed to discern which patients can be treated in primary care, and which patients should not. Integrated care models are promising, because many professionals can be involved in treatment of mental disorder in the primary care setting; especially for collaborative care models, evidence favours the treatment of common mental disorders in this setting. Conclusion: Integrated care models, such as collaborative care, provide a basis for multidisciplinary care for mental disorder in the primary care setting. Professional responsibilities should be clearly differentiated in order to facilitate integrated care. The level of functioning of patients with mental disorder can be used as indication criterion for treatment in the primary care setting or in Mental Health Institutions. Research to establish the feasibility of this model is needed.
- Published
- 2008
4. A stepped care programme for depression management: an uncontrolled pre-post study in primary and secondary care in The Netherlands
- Author
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Jolanda A.C. Meeuwissen, Christina M. van der Feltz-Cornelis, Harm W.J. van Marwijk, Paul B.M. Rijnders, and Marianne C.H. Donker
- Subjects
stepped care ,integrated care ,depression management ,treatment algorithm ,transmural care ,liaison-consultation ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Introduction: Stepped care strategies are potentially effective to organise integrated care but unknown is whether they function well in practice. This paper evaluates the implementation of a stepped care programme for depression in primary care and secondary care. Theory and methods: We developed a stepped care algorithm for diagnostics and treatment of depression, supported by a liaison-consultation function. In a 2½ year study with pre-post design in a pilot region, adherence to the protocol was assessed by interviewing 28 caregivers of 235 patients with mild, moderate, or severe major depression. Consultation and referral patterns between primary and secondary care were analysed. Results: Adherence of general practitioners and consultant caregivers to the stepped care protocol proved to be 96%. The percentage of patients referred for depression to secondary care decreased significantly from 26% to 21% (p=0.0180). In the post-period more patients received treatment in primary care and requests for consultation became more concordant with the stepped care protocol. Conclusions: Implementation of a stepped care programme is feasible in a primary and secondary care setting and is associated with less referrals. Discussion: Further research on all subsequent treatment steps in a standardised stepped care protocol is needed.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Ten years integrated care for mental disorders in the Netherlands
- Author
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Christina M. van der Feltz-Cornelis and No funding
- Subjects
Biopsychosocial model ,mental disorder ,Health (social science) ,Sociology and Political Science ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Psychological intervention ,Collaborative Care ,Nursing ,Health care ,collaborative care ,medicine ,Disease management (health) ,Reimbursement ,integrated care ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,bio psycho social model ,psychiatry ,disease management ,Health Policy ,Integrated care ,Policy ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,business - Abstract
Background and problem statement: Integrated care for mental disorders aims to encompass forms of collaboration between different health care settings for the treatment of mental disorders. To this end, it requires integration at several levels, i.e. integration of psychiatry in medicine, of the psychiatric discourse in the medical discourse; of localization of mental health care and general health care facilities; and of reimbursement systems. Description of policy practice: Steps have been taken in the last decade to meet these requirements, enabling psychiatry to move on towards integrated treatment of mental disorder as such, by development of a collaborative care model that includes structural psychiatric consultation that was found to be applicable and effective in several Dutch health care settings. This collaborative care model is a feasible and effective model for integrated care in several health care settings. The Bio Psycho Social System has been developed as a feasible instrument for assessment in integrated care as well.Discussion: The discipline of Psychiatry has moved from anti-psychiatry in the last century, towards an emancipated medical discipline. This enabled big advances towards integrated care for mental disorder, in collaboration with other medical disciplines, in the last decade.Conclusion: Now is the time to further expand this concept of care towards other mental disorders, and towards integrated care for medical and mental co-morbidity. Integrated care for mental disorder should be readily available to the patient, according to his/her preference, taking somatic co-morbidity into account, and with a focus on rehabilitation of the patient in his or her social roles.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Depression Initiative. Description of a collaborative care model for depression and of the factors influencing its implementation in the primary care setting in the Netherlands
- Author
-
Christina M. van der Feltz-Cornelis, Aartjan T. F. Beekman, Klaas M.L. Huijbregts, Kirsten M van Steenbergen-Weijenburg, Fransina J. de Jong, Harm W.J. van Marwijk, and Moniek C Vlasveld
- Subjects
Health (social science) ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Collaborative Care ,primary care ,Nursing ,Health care ,integrated care ,collaborative care ,major depressive disorder ,policy ,implementation ,health care system ,Medicine ,Reimbursement ,media_common ,lcsh:R5-920 ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Integrated care ,Negotiation ,Projects and Developments ,Major depressive disorder ,Professional association ,business ,lcsh:Medicine (General) - Abstract
Background: In the Depression Initiative, a promising collaborative care model for depression that was developed in the US was adapted for implementation in the Netherlands. Aim: Description of a collaborative care model for major depressive disorder (MDD) and of the factors influencing its implementation in the primary care setting in the Netherlands. Data sources: Data collected during the preparation phase of the CC:DIP trial of the Depression Initiative, literature, policy documents, information sheets from professional associations. Results: Factors facilitating the implementation of the collaborative care model are continuous supervision of the care managers by the consultant psychiatrist and the trainers, a supportive web-based tracking system and the new reimbursement system that allows for introduction of a mental health care-practice nurse (MHC-PN) in the general practices and coverage of the treatment costs. Impeding factors might be the relatively high percentage of solo-primary care practices, the small percentage of professionals that are located in the same building, unfamiliarity with the concept of collaboration as required for collaborative care, the reimbursement system that demands regular negotiations between each health care provider and the insurance companies and the reluctance general practitioners might feel to expand their responsibility for their depressed patients. Conclusion: Implementation of the collaborative care model in the Netherlands requires extensive training and supervision on micro level, facilitation of reimbursement on meso- and macro level and structural effort to change the treatment culture for chronic mental disorders in the primary care setting.
- Published
- 2009
7. A stepped care programme for depression management: an uncontrolled pre-post study in primary and secondary care in The Netherlands
- Author
-
Harm W.J. van Marwijk, Jolanda A. C. Meeuwissen, Christina M. van der Feltz-Cornelis, Paul B.M. Rijnders, and Marianne C.H. Donker
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Interview ,Referral ,stepped care ,depression management ,Ambulatory care ,Health care ,medicine ,Stepped care ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,integrated care ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Research and Theory ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,treatment algorithm ,Mental health ,Integrated care ,Family medicine ,transmural care ,liaison-consultation ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,business - Abstract
Introduction: Stepped care strategies are potentially effective to organise integrated care but unknown is whether they function well in practice. This paper evaluates the implementation of a stepped care programme for depression in primary care and secondary care. Theory and methods: We developed a stepped care algorithm for diagnostics and treatment of depression, supported by a liaison-consultation function. In a 2½ year study with pre-post design in a pilot region, adherence to the protocol was assessed by interviewing 28 caregivers of 235 patients with mild, moderate, or severe major depression. Consultation and referral patterns between primary and secondary care were analysed. Results: Adherence of general practitioners and consultant caregivers to the stepped care protocol proved to be 96%. The percentage of patients referred for depression to secondary care decreased significantly from 26% to 21% (p=0.0180). In the post-period more patients received treatment in primary care and requests for consultation became more concordant with the stepped care protocol. Conclusions: Implementation of a stepped care programme is feasible in a primary and secondary care setting and is associated with less referrals. Discussion: Further research on all subsequent treatment steps in a standardised stepped care protocol is needed.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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