Yale Bulletin and Calendar

February 8, 2002Volume 30, Number 17



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Study: When mental health clinics
offer medical care, patients benefit

Yale investigators found that integrating primary medical care as part of mental health services for patients with serious mental illness results in significant improvements in their health status and access to medical care.

"Patients with serious mental illness very often receive poor quality medical care and this may contribute to the higher levels of illness and mortality than are found in the rest of society," says one of the study's authors, Dr. Benjamin G. Druss, assistant professor in the Departments of Psychiatry and of Epidemiology and Public Health at the School of Medicine. "This is the first study to examine a model for improving their medical care and health status."

Druss and his Yale colleagues established an on-site, multi-disciplinary primary care team at an outpatient mental health clinic at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System in West Haven, Connecticut. The study, which appears in a recent issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry, compared the results for 120 individuals, half of whom received health care from the clinic's primary care team while the others accessed care through a general medicine clinic at the VA.

The study showed that those individuals accessing medical care through the mental health clinic received better quality of primary care and had improved health status over time. The costs for the two groups were similar.

"It is not clear whether the poor quality of medical care patients with mental illness receive is mainly a result of patients' fears or difficulty complying, or providers' discomfort in treating these patients," says Druss. "Whichever the source, the study's findings imply that integrating primary care into the mental health clinic setting improves access and quality of medical care for these patients, as well as their health status."

Druss and his colleagues are now examining new models to better integrate primary medical care for patients in other public-sector mental health settings.

The study was funded in part by the VA Connecticut Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center and by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Yale PREP to boost number of minorities in biomedicine

Study ranks Finland as No. 1 in environmental sustainability

Yale Engineering to mark its 150th anniversary

Yale Opera to present Mozart's fantastical tale 'The Magic Flute'

Yale and New Haven: Downtown News


ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

IN FOCUS: Collection of Musical Instruments

Book's authors share perspectives on Sept. 11 and its aftermath

Three exhibits opening Feb. 11 at the School of Architecture


MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS

Noted science reporter to visit as Poynter Fellow

Kenyan environmentalist to teach as McCluskey Fellow

'Injustice' of lead poisoning to be explored in F&ES talk

Event to explore innovative approaches to the law

Eugene Davidson, former editor at Yale Press, dies

Memorial service for Louis Martz

Yale Dining Halls has been honored by industry magazine

Yale Books in Brief

Campus Notes



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