1. Understanding the experience of care managers and relationship with patient outcomes: the COMPASS initiative
- Author
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Margarita D. Parra, Todd Hinnenkamp, Rebecca C. Rossom, Lynnice K. Ruona, Tani Hemmila, Barbara Hann, Karen J. Coleman, Sue Vos, Jeyn Monkman, Mark D. Valenti, Rachel Quarrell, Nasya Smith, and Emily Brandenfels
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Motivational interviewing ,Collaborative Care ,Comorbidity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Ambulatory care ,medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intersectoral Collaboration ,Depressive Disorder ,Social work ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Behavioral activation ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Patient Care Management ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Family medicine ,business - Abstract
Objective To understand how care managers implemented COMPASS and if this was related to patient health outcomes. Methods A total of 96 COMPASS care managers were approached to participate in the online survey and 93 (97%) provided responses. Correlations were generated between key survey responses and the average number of care management contacts, patient depression, blood pressure and glycosylated hemoglobin outcomes. Results Patients of care managers who reported spending more time on COMPASS-related tasks had higher rates of depression improvement ( r =0.34; P =.002) and remission ( r =0.27; P =.02) as well as higher rates of blood pressure control ( r =0.29; P =.03). Conclusions To improve the effectiveness of care management in collaborative care models, particularly for patients with comorbid conditions and complex nonmedical needs, care managers need the support of social work and administrative support staff. Care managers for this patient population would also benefit from more intensive training in nonpharmacological depression treatment, such as motivational interviewing and behavioral activation. Additionally, systems support is needed such as education for primary care teams and psychiatry on the value of collaborative care models and integration of population management tools into electronic medical records.
- Published
- 2015