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Integrated Behavioral and Physical Health Care: Be ...
Reference List
Reference List
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This document is a list of references related to integrated behavioral and physical health care, specifically focusing on best practices and treatment models. The references cover a wide range of topics including legislation, research studies, guidelines, and reports. Some of the key themes and subjects addressed in the references include:<br /><br />- The 21st Century Cures Act<br />- Integration of mental health/substance abuse and primary care<br />- Behavioral health and primary care integration lexicon<br />- Defining the Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH)<br />- Standards of care for diabetes<br />- Evidence base and principles of collaborative care<br />- Physical health assessment of people with serious mental illness<br />- Disease burden among individuals with severe mental illness<br />- Physical and mental health behaviors among individuals with severe mental illness<br />- Impact of mental health-based primary care program on emergency department visits and inpatient stays<br />- Mental health parity and addiction equity act<br />- Advancing integration of behavioral health into primary care<br />- Physical health inequities in people with severe mental illness<br />- Clinical workflows for integrated care<br />- Changes in physical and psychiatric health after lifestyle-enhancing treatment for severe mental illness<br />- Cigarette smoking among patients with serious mental illness<br />- Psychiatry's role in improving physical health of patients with serious mental illness<br />- Physical health screening for patients with severe mental illness<br />- Motivation for physical activity and exercise in severe mental illness<br />- Telemedicine-based collaborative care for posttraumatic stress disorder<br />- Core competencies for integrated behavioral health and primary care<br />- Impact of integrated healthcare on patients with serious mental illness<br />- Prevalence of medical conditions in the population with serious mental illness<br />- Medicaid models for integrating physical and behavioral health care<br />- Collaborative care for depression and chronic illnesses<br />- Domestic and sexual violence against patients with severe mental illness<br />- Provider and practice-level competencies for integrated behavioral health in primary care<br />- Neurocognition in schizophrenia<br />- Mental health professionals' responsibilities in managing physical health among people with severe mental illness<br />- Associations of serious mental illness with earnings<br />- Strategies for prevention and management of antipsychotic-induced metabolic side effects<br />- Intervention to address medical conditions and health-risk behaviors among persons with serious mental illness<br />- Tobacco use and smoking behaviors among individuals with serious mental illness<br />- Measurement-based care in psychiatry<br />- Levels of integrated healthcare framework<br />- Integrated care for the physical health needs of people with severe mental illness<br />- Securing stable housing for people with mental health conditions<br />- Physical health outcomes and behavioral health homes<br />- Substance use and mental health indicators in the United States<br />- Community participation factors and neurocognitive functioning among individuals with schizophrenia<br />- Collaborative care for opioid and alcohol use disorders in primary care<br />- Autonomy preferences for physical health decision-making among adults with severe mental illness in integrated care<br />- Implementation and effectiveness of a medical home for people with serious mental illness.
Keywords
Integration of mental health and primary care
Patient-Centered Medical Home
Evidence-based collaborative care
Physical health assessment
Mental health parity
Physical health inequities
Collaborative care for depression
Provider competencies
Metabolic side effects
Substance use indicators
Funding for SMI Adviser was made possible by Grant No. SM080818 from SAMHSA of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement by, SAMHSA/HHS or the U.S. Government.
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