Posted On: May 25, 2022
About Edwin D. Boudreaux, PhD:
Dr. Boudreaux approaches the challenge associated with solving seemingly intractable barriers to deliver high-quality behavioral healthcare by working with interdisciplinary teams who have complementary expertise and perspectives and figuring out the right balance between human centered approaches and the use of technology to facilitate workflow.
Posted On: April 27, 2022
Dr. Boudreaux approaches the challenge associated with solving seemingly intractable barriers to deliver high-quality behavioral healthcare by working with interdisciplinary teams who have complementary expertise and perspectives and figuring out the right balance between human-centered approaches and the use of technology to facilitate workflow.
Posted On: August 18, 2021
First let me say that the PHQ-9 is a fairly good tool for screening patients and identifying those who have an unmet behavioral health need. While I think computer adaptive testing is a better approach and the way of the future, there are still plenty of settings where a paper and pencil PHQ-9 is the best we can do.
Posted On: July 19, 2021
For years employers in many sectors, including healthcare, have offered funding for continuing education as an employment “benefit.” As healthcare increasingly focuses on quality of care, are there good reasons to think about this investment?
Posted On: May 25, 2021
A Behavioral Health staff huddle at the Barre Family Health Center
Does more integration mean better healthcare? What if you work in a rural practice or in a busy practice in the center of a major city? Dr. Daniel Mullin and colleagues developed the Practice Integration Profile (PIP) to create a measure of integrated primary care that compares practices and monitors integration in a practice over time. Read the post by clicking on the title.
Posted On: April 15, 2021
This blog post is authored by a graduate of our 2014 “Primary Care Behavioral Health” course. Many of our former students go on to do significant work in the healthcare field. Dr. Cherepanov’s experience includes global mental health work in Chernobyl, Chechnya, Kosovo, and Liberia. She now works as lead clinician for refugee services at Lynn Community Health Center—one of CIPC’s long-term partners in integration training.
During public health complex emergencies (CE), healthcare workers play a crucial role. This work can be rewarding as it reminds health professionals about their mission and purpose. But just like “a perfect storm,” CE disrupts the fabric of community life, and the responders are subjected to the same ailments as their patients (Cherepanov, 2019). When responding to international CEs, humanitarians accumulated a great deal of experience dealing with extreme work stresses. This experience offers a valuable insight into the psychological challenges the frontline healthcare workers face during the pandemic and the best practices for managing them.
This post first appeared in January 2021 in the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.
Posted On: March 08, 2021
Dr. Ethan Eisdorfer, a behavioral health provider at our Barre Family Health Center, analyzes a recent JAMA article about using non-specialist care providers to deliver brief mental health interventions to pregnant and post-partum women.
The most common types of non-specialists in these studies were midwives and nurses, but also included peers or community members, health visitors, and even family physicians. In many of the studies included in the analysis, professional mental health specialists served in a training or supervisory role without providing any direct care.
What would task-shifting like this throughout primary care practices look like? How might it change the efficiency and efficacy of current healthcare? Click on the title above to learn more.
Posted On: February 11, 2021
Current research suggests that Medical Group Visits (MGVs) address the well-known triple aim: improving the experience of care, improving the health of populations, and reducing per capita costs. But what about the quadruple aim, which adds improved clinician experience?
Clinician burnout, especially during the pandemic, is a serious concern for US healthcare delivery. Talented and dedicated clinicians are leaving the profession and there is mounting proof that when clinicians are over-stressed there are negative consequences for patient care.
Read the post by clicking on the title
Posted On: December 14, 2020
Is practicing the spirit of Motivational Interviewing enough? Implications for MI teachers and students
Read more about what actually produces skilled MI practitioners in this post by CIPC Director, Dr. Daniel Mullin. Dan has been teaching and practicing Motivational Interviewing for more than 20 years and he discusses data about MI training and his observations about how MI is used in real clinical situations. Click on the title to read the post.