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Building PublicPrivate Partnerships: Women and Depression

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Poor at delegation. Getting the MD Involved. Finding Physicians for Partnerships ... Pennsylvania. Texas. California. Maryland. Colorado. Hawaii. Joining ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building PublicPrivate Partnerships: Women and Depression


1
Building Public/Private Partnerships Women
and Depression
  • MCHB Federal/State Partnership Meeting
  • October 20, 2003
  • Jeanne Mahoney
  • American College of Obstetricians and
    Gynecologists Providers Partnership Project

2
  • This Activity has been supported through a
    cooperative agreement with the Maternal and Child
    Health Bureau
  • Grant 6U93 MC 00161-03-03

3
Overview
  • Whats the big deal about depression?
  • Whats a community/clinical partnership?
  • Why partner?
  • How do I identify and recruit partners, including
    clinicians?
  • What are the basic components of these
    partnerships?
  • Give me some examples

4
Impact of Depression
  • 20 Lifetime prevalence for women
  • Somatic illnesses for women and their children
    (Grupp-Phelan 2003)
  • Family distress partner and children
  • Employer costs
  • Estimated U.S. economic burden,
  • 44 Billion (Greenberg, 1993)

5
ACOGs Partnership Project
  • Cooperative agreement begun in 1988
  • State-level partnerships modeled after
    AMCHP/CityMatCH and focused on
  • Perinatal HIV Transmission (with AMCHP) 10
    teams
  • Women and Tobacco Use 5 teams
  • Depression in Women 12 teams

6
Definition Clinical Community Partnership
  • Partnership vs.. Involvement
  • Partnership vs.. Association
  • Partnership vs. Collaboration
  • Partnership vs. Commitment
  • American Heritage dictionary
  • a relationship between individuals or groups
    that is characterized by mutual cooperation and
    responsibility, as for the achievement of a
    specified goal

7
Why Partner?Participant - Organizational Benefits
  • Networking/information sharing
  • Increase chance of positive results
  • Enthusiasm and energy is infectious
  • Money goes further by sharing resources
  • Opportunity for leadership roles

8
Why Partner?Community Benefits
  • Can identify and address systemic problems not to
    be tackled alone
  • Identify resources and gaps
  • Able to deliver united and consistent health
    messages
  • Theres power in numbers


9
Goals of Most Depression Partnerships
  • Universal screening by health care provider
  • Providers trained in conducting assessments and
    doing brief interventions
  • Womens care providers become familiar with
    medications including in pregnancy and
    lactation
  • Coordination with/development of local referral
    networks and support systems
  • Education of public on recognizing and getting
    help for depression

10
Who Brings What?
  • Commmunity programs
  • Have unique community-based resources
  • Able to advocate for women
  • Public Health / focused organizations
  • Have data on population
  • Have access to resources
  • Private Womens Health Providers
  • Have access to patient population
  • Have some flexibility in care delivery

11
Why OB/GYN Providers Need to be Involved
  • ¾ depressed women do not seek out mental health
    provider (Cassidy, 2003)
  • OB/GYNs frequently only medical provider women
    see regularly
  • Many women will not accept depression diagnosis
    especially non-White (Cooper 2003)

12
Issues for depression treatment OB/GYN
  • Mental health issues are not part of OB/GYN
    training
  • Inadequate clinical time to assess and intervene
    for depression
  • Lack of reimbursement for time spent
  • Lack of knowledge of/ or unavailable referral
    resources
  • Lack of diagnosis/treatment acceptance,
    particularly for African-American and Hispanic
    women (Cooper 2003)

13
Getting the MD InvolvedBarriers Physician
Perceives
  • Too much time out of the office
  • I have nothing to offer
  • Unfamiliar/uncomfortable in public health arena
  • Concerns about liability issues overshadow
    interests
  • Not a committee person
  • Ill end up doing everything
  • Independent
  • Poor at delegation

14
Getting the MD InvolvedFinding Physicians for
Partnerships
  • Physicians to consider for teams
  • State and local officers of professional
    societies
  • Chairpersons of any local or state committees
  • Physicians who have appeared at legislative
    hearings
  • Those with an obvious interest
  • Semi-retired or retired physicians

15
Organizations to Consider for Partners
  • Advocacy organizations- March of Dimes, Mental
    Health Association, YWCA, HMHB, Postpartum
    Support International
  • Academic entities/individuals
  • Local, state, federal government
  • Managed care, funders of MH Services
  • Mental health providers associations
  • Media

16
Successful Partnerships
  • How did partnerships begin?
  • What were the initial activities?
  • What barriers were overcome?
  • How can partnerships be sustained?

17
Systems Service Delivery
  • Partnership must involve both
  • development of systems and
  • the utilization of that system through service
    delivery.
  • Both systems and services require evaluation.

18
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19
Systems and Services
  • Systems
  • Do needs assessment
  • Identify gaps
  • Identify partners and resources
  • Choose a model of intervention
  • Develop an action plan
  • Develop a plan for evaluation
  • Services
  • Train those who are intervening
  • Deliver the intervention
  • Evaluate delivery and effect of intervention

20
Components for strong and sustainable
partnerships
  • Focus
  • Stakeholders
  • Plan
  • Evaluable
  • Funding

21
Components for strong and sustainable
partnerships
  • Focus
  • Develop a shared vision

22
Components for strong and sustainable
partnerships
  • Focus
  • Stakeholders
  • Partner selection
  • Partner maintenance

23
Components for strong and sustainable
partnerships
  • Focus
  • Stakeholders
  • Plan
  • Compatible with all
  • organizational cultures and values
  • Realistic timeline to achieve goals

24
Components for strong and sustainable
partnerships
  • Focus
  • Stakeholders
  • Plan
  • Evaluable
  • Conformity of data used by all
  • Cleary define outcome measures

25
Components for strong and sustainable
partnerships
  • Focus
  • Stakeholders
  • Plan Evaluable
  • Funding
  • Need commitment of adequate resources
  • Issue of continuing concern

26
Other Examples of State-Level Depression
Partnerships
  • Illinois ? Florida
  • North Dakota ? Indiana
  • Pennsylvania
  • Texas
  • California
  • Maryland
  • Colorado
  • Hawaii

27
Community/Clinician Partnerships
  • Joining together for healthy women
  • and
  • healthy
  • babies

28
Jeanne Mahoney Director, Providers Partnership
Project American College of Ob/Gyn 409 12th St.,
SW, Washington, DC 20024 202.314.2352
Jmahoney_at_acog.org Acknowledgements Ellen
Hutchins, ScD MCHB, HRSA Karen Hench, RN, MS
MCHB-HRSA Terrance McGaw, MD, FACOG Partnership
project leader, NV Providers Partnership meeting
notes, 1/27/03
29
References
  • Grupp-Phelan J, Whitaker RC, Naish AB. Depression
    in mothers of children presenting for emergency
    and primary careimpact on mothers perceptions
    of caring for their children. Ambulatory
    Pediatrics. 20033(3)142-146.
  • Greenburg PE. The economic burden of depression.
    J Clin Psychiatry. 199354405-418. Abstract.
  • Cassidy JM, et al. Behavioral health care
    integration in obstetrics and gynecology. General
    Medicine. 2003 5(2)
  • Cooper LA, et al. The acceptability of treatment
    for depression among African-American, Hispanic,
    and white primary care patients. Medical Care.
    200341(4479-489
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