Abstract
The authors sought to describe a reverse-integration intervention aimed at improving preventive health screening in a community mental health clinic. The intervention, CRANIUM (cardiometabolic risk assessment and treatment through a novel integration model for underserved populations with mental illness), integrated primary care services into a large urban community mental health setting. It was implemented in 2015 and included a patient-centered team, population-based care, emphasis on screening, and evidence-based treatment. CRANIUM’s strengths included provider acceptability, a patient-centered approach, sustained patient engagement, and economic feasibility. Challenges included underutilized staff, registry maintenance, and unanticipated screening barriers. The CRANIUM reverse-integration model can be feasibly implemented and was acceptable to providers.
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CITATION STYLE
Mangurian, C., Thomas, M. D., Mitsuishi, F., Goldman, L. E., Niu, G., Handley, M. A., … Schillinger, D. (2022). Lessons Learned From a New Reverse-Integration Model to Improve Primary Care Screening in Community Mental Health Settings. Psychiatric Services, 73(8), 942–945. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.202100177
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