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Management of mental disorders in rural primary care: a proposal for integrated psychosocial services
Authors:Badger L  Robinson H  Farley T
Affiliation:Graduate School of Social Service, Fordham University, New York, NY 10023, USA. LBadger@hotmail.com
Abstract:Mental health facilities and specialized providers are particularly lacking in rural areas. Even when these are available, poverty, negative attitudes toward mental health treatments, and traditional rural values of privacy and autonomy often result in low utilization rates. Consequently, most mental health care in rural America is provided by primary care physicians who are also faced with competing demands, including tensions among limited time and resources, the multiple and complex needs of patients, and economic forces determining reimbursements. We propose that in the best interest of physicians and their patients, fully integrated psychosocial services in rural primary care settings would reduce the burden of time-consuming mental health care, conform to patient preference for immediate on-site care, reduce nonproductive medical care use, and eliminate duplication of effort by physicians and mental health professionals. The treatment model we propose would provide multiple arenas for psychosocial intervention - with the individual, the family, and the community - based on the patient's self-identified needs. The integration of psychosocial services within primary rural care is readily available, economically feasible, and urgently needed, but physicians must take the lead to implement this collaborative treatment partnership.
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