1 / 11

mHealth as a Means to Connect Services across Departments

mHealth as a Means to Connect Services across Departments. Matthew Price, PhD Post-Doctoral Fellow National Crime Victims Research & Treatment Center Department of Psychiatry Medical University of South Carolina. The Best Camera…. A Population In Need.

tekla
Télécharger la présentation

mHealth as a Means to Connect Services across Departments

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. mHealth as a Means to Connect Services across Departments Matthew Price, PhD Post-Doctoral Fellow National Crime Victims Research & Treatment Center Department of Psychiatry Medical University of South Carolina

  2. The Best Camera…

  3. A Population In Need • 60.7% of men and 51.2% of women have been exposed to a traumatic event in their life time 1,2 • “…Event that threatened death, serious injury, or physical integrity”3 • “…Response involved intense fear helplessness, or horror”3 • Increased risk for mental health 3-6 and physical health issues7, 8 • Symptoms often become chronic 9, 10 1Breslau et al., 1997; 2Kessler et al., 1995; 3DSM-IV-TR Criteria; 4Bennice et al., 2003; 5Zlotnick et al., 2006; 6Gutierres & Van Puymbroeck, 2006; 7 Brickman et al., 2002; 8Campbell et al., 2002; 9Zlotnick et al., 1998; 10Cougle, Resnick, Kilpatrick 2011

  4. Psychiatric Diagnosis After A Traumatic Injury Zatzick et al., 2007; Bryant et al., 2010

  5. Obtaining Mental Health Treatment After an Injury Wang et al., 2005; Bryant et al., 2010; Price et al., in preparation

  6. Starting Treatment In Acute Care • Models of care that “link services” are needed1 • “Engagement strategies should specifically target these high-risk groups, as well as high-risk periods, including following an emergency room visit…”(pg. 696) 2 1BoyerMcAlpine, Pottick, Olfson, 2000; 2Kreyenbuhl, Nossel, Dixon, 2009

  7. Current Continuous Care Models • Such models have been developed for other types of care • However… • “Systematic outreach is costly and might be reserved for exceptionally traumatic events.” (pg. 765)3 • Has greater “Reach”5 Collaborative Care2 (Medium/High) PE in the ED1 (Medium) Trauma Outreach3 (Medium/High) 1Rothbaum, Kearns, Price, Kessler, Davis, Houry, under review; 2Zatzick et al., 2004; 3Shalev et al., 2011; 4Breslau et al., 1997; 5Koepsell, Zatzick, Russo, 2011

  8. Reach of Technology Based Interventions N = 4,224 N = 5,536 2 1 1Shalev et al., 2011; 2Price et al., 2012

  9. mConnected Care

  10. Moving Forward • Current Position • NCVC & Trauma Center Collaboration • Collecting Recruitment Feasibility Data • Who we are looking for to move forward • Developers with mobile application/website experience • Clinics who see a high degree of trauma patients • What we are looking for to move forward • Assessment strategies suited for mobile devices • Additional interested collaborators

  11. Acknowledgements • Kenneth J. Ruggiero, PhD • Carla K. Danielson, PhD • Jenna L. McCauley, PhD • Kirstin S. Gros, PhD • Daniel F. Gros, PhD • Dean G. Kilpatrick, PhD • Samir M. Fakhry, MD • Debbie Couillard, RN • Pamela Ferguson, PhD • Evert Eriksson, MD • Stephan A. Fann, MD • Bruce A Crookes, MD • Regina Creech, MS, CHES

More Related