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Catalog
The Early Psychosis Intervention Network (EPINET) ...
handout: slides_s32159-2a-2
handout: slides_s32159-2a-2
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Pdf Summary
The document consists of multiple sections related to the 3rd National Conference on Advancing Early Psychosis Care in the United States: Addressing Inequities - Race, Culture, and COVID. The conference was presented by the American Psychiatric Association and funded by a grant. Various speakers and their profiles are provided, including Susan T. Azrin, PhD, Abram Rosenblatt, PhD, Howard H. Goldman, MD, PhD, and Diana Perkins, MD, MPH. Topics discussed include the Early Psychosis Intervention Network (EPINET) Core Assessment Battery, tools and resources for building an early psychosis learning health care partnership, and the role of the EPINET National Data Coordinating Center (ENDCC). The document also addresses the development of the CAB, standardized measures within the CAB domains, the EPINET as a learning health care system, and the Early Psychosis Interventions in North Carolina (EPI-NC) program. The EPI-NC program focuses on delivering early psychosis coordinated specialty care services in community care settings and discusses strategies and challenges associated with service delivery. The document also mentions quality assurance measures, program census, patient demographics, and service delivery in EPI-NC. Key outcomes from the program include employment and enrollment in school, disability benefits, and symptom severity. The document concludes by discussing the challenges and opportunities associated with learning from and leveraging EPINET and the alignment of EPI-NC with EPINET. Acknowledgments are provided to the EPI-NC team and the North Carolina Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities & Substance Abuse Services.
Keywords
National Conference
Early Psychosis Care
Inequities
EPINET
Learning Health Care Partnership
Service Delivery
Patient Demographics
Employment
Symptom Severity
Challenges
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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