Many patients with mental illness depend on family physicians (FPs) for their physical and mental health care, yet FPs often report dissatisfaction with the quality of mental health care they provide. A 2-year, quality improvement (QI) manual-based initiative was developed to increase FPs' diagnostic, cognitive-behavioural, and interpersonal treatment skills for depression. Two teams, each consisting of a psychiatrist and a mental health therapist, rotated through 18 family practices in Victoria, British Columbia, mentoring the model on-site with physicians and patients. Feedback suggests that this initiative enhanced the ability of FPs to diagnose depression and comorbid disorders, organize problems, and treat depression using non-pharmaceutical approaches.
CITATION STYLE
Campbell, H., Miller, M., Stretch, J., & Weinerman, R. (2008). A quality improvement initiative for depression: Finally, a model for use in “real” family physician time. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, 27(2), 191–199. https://doi.org/10.7870/cjcmh-2008-0028
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