Implementation of collaborative care for depressive disorder treatment among accountable care organizations

Collaborative care – primary care models combining care management, consulting behavioral health clinicians, and registries to target mental health treatment – is a cost-effective depression treatment model, but little is known about uptake of collaborative care in a national setting. Alternative payment models such as accountable care organizations (ACOs), in which ACOs are responsible for quality and cost for defined patient populations, may encourage collaborative care use. Determine prevalence of collaborative care implementation among ACOs and whether ACO structure or contract characteristics are associated with implementation. Cross-sectional analysis of 2017–2018 National Survey of ACOs (NSACO). Overall, 55% of ACOs returned a survey (69% of Medicare, 36% of non-Medicare ACOs); 48% completed at least half of core survey questions. We used logistic regression to examine the association between implementation of core collaborative care components – care management, a consulting mental health clinician, and a patient registry to track mental health symptoms – and ACO characteristics. Four hundred five National Survey of ACOs respondents answering questions on collaborative care implementation. Only 17% of ACOs reported implementing all collaborative care components. Most reported using care managers (71%) and consulting mental health clinicians (58%), =just 26% reported using patient registries. After adjusting for multiple ACO characteristics, ACOs ...
Source: Medicine - Category: Internal Medicine Tags: Research Article: Observational Study Source Type: research