Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T03:33:46.083Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

New directions for psychiatric rehabilitation in the USA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2016

G. R. Bond*
Affiliation:
Westat Inc, Health Studies Sector, Rivermill Commercial Center, 85 Mechanic St., Lebanon, New Hampshire 03766, USA
R. E. Drake
Affiliation:
Westat Inc, Health Studies Sector, Rivermill Commercial Center, 85 Mechanic St., Lebanon, New Hampshire 03766, USA
*
*Address for correspondence: G. R. Bond, Westat Inc, Health Studies Sector, Rivermill Commercial Center, 85 Mechanic St., Lebanon, New Hampshire 03766, USA. (Email: [email protected])
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

American researchers have led the world in developing, evaluating, and disseminating evidence-based psychiatric rehabilitation practices for people with serious mental illness. Paradoxically, however, the USA lags behind most industrialized nations in providing access to high-quality mental health and psychiatric services. This essay examines several evidence-based practices developed in the USA, the spread of these practices, the barriers to ensuring availability to people who could benefit from these services, and some promising directions for overcoming the barriers. Factors influencing the growth and sustainment of effective client-centred practices include the availability of adequate and stable funding, committed leadership, and the influence of vested interests. Two strategies for promoting the spread and sustainment of well-implemented evidence-based practices are the adoption of fidelity scales and learning communities.

Type
Editorials
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

In this essay we describe the status of psychiatric rehabilitation services in the USA and offer our recommendations for future directions. We examine this paradox: while the USA has led the way in developing, researching and disseminating evidence-based psychiatric rehabilitation services around the world (Corrigan et al. Reference Corrigan, Mueser, Bond, Drake and Solomon2008), the quality of mental health treatment and rehabilitation services in the USA lags behind services in many other industrialised nations, much as does the overall US health care system. The USA consistently ranks far below most countries in a wide range of health indicators despite its much higher per capita expenditure for health care (Squires & Anderson, Reference Squires and Anderson2015). The US health care system is expensive, inefficient and diverse – essentially a non-system producing enormous disparities in care. Thus far, health care reform through the Affordable Care Act has not led to wider adoption of evidence-based care for Americans with serious mental illness (Olfson et al. Reference Olfson, Pincus and Pardes2013).

Mental health services in the USA are funded through a combination of different private insurances (mostly for families covered by employer benefits and others receiving coverage through health exchanges) and public insurance through Medicaid, Medicare, benefits to military veterans and other programs. Only a minority of Americans with serious mental illness receive any mental health treatment at all (Wang et al. Reference Wang, Lane, Olfson, Pincus, Wells and Kessler2005). Private health insurance rarely pays for psychiatric rehabilitation services. Among Americans with serious mental illness who do receive mental health and rehabilitation services most do so as clients in public mental health clinics funded primarily through Medicaid. People with mental health needs are often unhappy with available mental health services; approximately one-third of those who have contact with the mental health service system drop out quickly (Kreyenbuhl et al. Reference Kreyenbuhl, Nosse and Dixon2009). Largely because of systemic problems, <5% of people with serious mental illness receive high-quality psychiatric rehabilitation services (Drake et al. Reference Drake, Bond and Essock2009).

Despite the wide endorsement of recovery as a guiding principle of psychiatric rehabilitation (Anthony, Reference Anthony1993), state mental health agencies in the USA, through their state Medicaid plans, continue to support outdated psychosocial services, such as brokered case management services, day treatment and institution-based skills training. To maximise Medicaid reimbursement, mental health providers often offer predominantly group modalities even when clients prefer, and might benefit more, from individualised services. Moreover, state mental health spending includes sizeable allocations of funding for psychotropic medications, out of proportion to any benefits and to a large extent antithetical to recovery (Drake et al. Reference Drake, Skinner and Goldman2008). The US mental health system serves vested interests rather than client interests.

This essay examines several evidence-based practices (EBPs) developed in the USA, the spread of these practices, the barriers to ensuring availability to people who could benefit from these services and some promising directions for overcoming the barriers.

The evidence base for effective psychiatric rehabilitation practices

People with severe mental illness have the same life goals as everyone else. These goals include a safe, decent, affordable and permanent place to live, access to education and employment, friendships and community participation in leisure and growth activities. In other words, they want to live satisfying, functional, meaningful lives, not just be stable (Deegan, Reference Deegan1988; Drake & Whitley, Reference Drake and Whitley2014). To be client-centred, psychiatric rehabilitation should aim at realising these life goals. Are these goals attainable?

Experts defined evidence-based medicine as ‘the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients’ (Sackett et al. Reference Sackett, Rosenberg, Gray, Haynes and Richardson1996). A 1998 conference of mental health leaders called for systematic attention to its application to psychiatric rehabilitation practices (Drake et al. Reference Drake, Goldman, Leff, Lehman, Dixon, Mueser and Torrey2001). Researchers, primarily from the USA, have identified a large and growing number of effective psychiatric rehabilitation practices (Corrigan et al. Reference Corrigan, Mueser, Bond, Drake and Solomon2008; Dixon et al. Reference Dixon, Dickerson, Bellack, Bennett, Dickinson, Goldberg, Lehman, Tenhula, Calmes, Pasillas, Peer and Kreyenbuhl2010). Evidence-based models have been developed for many recovery goals, including employment (Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Goldberg, Braude, Dougherty, Daniels, Ghose, George and Delphin-Rittmon2014), independent living (Rog et al. Reference Rog, Marshall, Dougherty, George, Daniels, Ghose and Delphin-Rittmon2014) and community living skills (Bond & Drake, Reference Bond and Drake2015). Illness self-management approaches, such as the Wellness Recovery Action Planning, foster attainment of personal life goals (Cook et al. Reference Cook, Copeland, Floyd, Jonikas, Hamilton, Razzano, Carter, Hudson, Grey and Boyd2012). In other life domains, notably the interpersonal realm (social networks, friendship and intimacy), establishing EBPs has been more difficult (Davidson et al. Reference Davidson, Shahar, Stayner, Chinman, Rakfeldt and Tebes2004). More research is needed, of course, but the more serious issue is that practices for which the evidence is well established are not widely available. This gap between what practices are effective and which are actually available and delivered with high fidelity – what has been termed the science-to-service gap (Drake & Essock, Reference Drake and Essock2009) – is the most pressing problem in the US public mental health system.

Lack of evidence-based psychiatric rehabilitation practices

According to reports from state mental health leaders in their annual reports for the Federal Block Grant, approximately 2% of clients with serious mental illness enrolled in the public mental health system have access to evidence-based psychiatric rehabilitation services, a statistic that has remained steady in reports over the last decade (Bruns et al. Reference Bruns, Kerns, Pullmann, Hensley, Lutterman and Hoagwood2016). Service gaps occur at three levels: states that have not adopted practices into their state plans, limited penetration within states that have adopted a practice and limited capacity to serve clients within programs once practices are established.

States began adopting EBPs in the early 2000s. After this initial effort, however, the uptake of EBPs levelled off or declined over the next decade (Bruns et al. Reference Bruns, Kerns, Pullmann, Hensley, Lutterman and Hoagwood2016). Many states have made only minimal progress.

The national data sets compiled by Bruns et al. (Reference Bruns, Kerns, Pullmann, Hensley, Lutterman and Hoagwood2016) provide the most comprehensive snapshot of the spread of EBPs in the USA. These data, based on self-reported surveys that state leaders completed on an annual basis for federal reporting purposes, are the only systematic information we have for most practices. These annual surveys provide only rough estimates of the spread of EBPs and virtually no information on penetration at the client level.

A 2015 national survey on the prevalence of evidence-based employment services known as Individual Placement and Support (IPS) (Johnson-Kwochka et al. Reference Johnson-Kwochka, Bond, Drake, Becker and Greenesubmitted) yielded greater detail. Of the 50 states and District of Columbia, 38 (75%) offered IPS services, reporting a total of 523 IPS programs nationwide. The state IPS program penetration rate (number of IPS programs per 10 000 people) ranged from 0.01 to 1.67 (M = 0.36, s.d. = 0.37) in the 38 states reporting IPS services. IPS programs vary widely in size, but two large IPS surveys suggested an average program caseload size of about 60 (Bond et al. Reference Bond, Peterson, Becker and Drake2012; Kim et al. Reference Kim, Bond, Becker, Swanson and Reese2015). Using these figures, we concluded that over 30 000 clients with serious mental illness in the USA received IPS services in 2015. Given that the 2010 US Census reported roughly 200 million working-age Americans, and assuming 5% of the population, or about 10 million people, had a serious mental illness, the percentage of Americans with serious mental illness receiving IPS is approximately 0.3% – a tiny fraction of the 70% who want to work and could potentially benefit.

Why do American citizens lack access to EBPs despite abundant national resources? We next examine several key barriers and facilitators to adoption, implementation, sustainment and expansion of evidence-based psychiatric rehabilitation programs, drawing on a framework shown in Table 1. This table is adapted from a framework developed in a national study examining implementation and sustainment of EBPs (Torrey et al. Reference Torrey, Bond, McHugo and Swain2012).

Table 1. Operational definitions for implementation/sustainability factor domains

What are the barriers?

Many factors have prevented the spread of evidence-based psychiatric rehabilitation services. Since the 1950s, psychiatric rehabilitation services in the USA have been underfunded, requiring program leaders to access a patchwork of federal, state, local and private funding sources, each with its own set of eligibility requirements, funding caps, time limits and documentation procedures. The lack of adequate and predictable funding is the most significant barrier to adopting and sustaining EBPs (Seffrin et al. Reference Seffrin, Panzano and Roth2009; Wiltsey Stirman et al. Reference Wiltsey Stirman, Kimberly, Cook, Calloway, Castro and Charns2012). State Medicaid plans often make it far easier to finance outmoded services than evidence-based rehabilitation services. Despite its mandate to promote quality of care, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which is the federal agency responsible for giving guidance to states on their Medicaid plans, has been timid in providing clear instructions that would empower state leaders to pursue evidence-based rehabilitation services. Medicaid funding typically incentivises group services over individualised services, clinic-based services over community-based services and medication-related services over non-pharmacological self-management approaches.

State mental health directors experience myriad pressures: legislators demand cost cuts, industry lobbyists want to expand pharmacology, families prioritise protecting vulnerable patients, providers often desire to maintain current services and so on. EBPs may be low on the list. Furthermore, these leaders have such short tenure in their jobs that continuity of system development suffers. The public mental health workforce is typically not prepared to deliver EBPs, and state funds for retraining have been severely diminished.

Pharmaceutical companies have aggressively and successfully marketed many new and costly antidepressant and antipsychotic medications initially hailed as having both greater efficacy and fewer side effects. Studies subsequently have disproved these claims, and companies have paid large settlements to the Department of Justice related to false advertising. The heavy marketing and adoption of these drugs had a further negative effect; funding for community rehabilitation services shrank precipitously as state mental health agencies allocated increasing proportions of their budgets for the new medications (Drake et al. Reference Drake, Skinner and Goldman2008). Compounding this problem is the federal law forbidding the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services from negotiating with pharmaceutical companies on the price of medications, in contrast to other nations.

What are the facilitators?

Notwithstanding slow progress, several developments may give optimism. Payment is of course the chief vehicle for reform. Government and private insurers are currently shifting from paying for the amount of services to paying for valued outcomes. If implemented broadly, these payment changes should decrease ineffective and harmful services and promote those that actually help people.

The federal government and private foundations have helped to promote EBPs by sponsoring demonstrations, such as the National Evidence-based Practices Project (McHugo et al. Reference McHugo, Drake, Whitley, Bond, Campbell, Rapp, Goldman, Lutz and Finnerty2007). Demonstrations are often short-lived when states do not sustain funding and leadership. State leaders can influence the spread of EBPs through establishing standards, incentivising effective services, aligning policies and monitoring services (Finnerty et al. Reference Finnerty, Rapp, Bond, Lynde, Ganju and Goldman2009). Two strategies that have helped many states are the adoption of fidelity scales and learning communities.

Program fidelity refers to provision of services consistent with objective criteria defined by a program model. Since the late 1990s, researchers, mostly in the USA, have developed, validated and refined a series of EBP fidelity scales (McHugo et al. Reference McHugo, Drake, Whitley, Bond, Campbell, Rapp, Goldman, Lutz and Finnerty2007), including scales for IPS (Bond et al. Reference Bond, Peterson, Becker and Drake2012), assertive community treatment (Monroe-DeVita et al. Reference Monroe-DeVita, Teague and Moser2011), Housing First (Gilmer et al. Reference Gilmer, Stefancic, Sklar and Tsemberis2013) and Illness Management and Recovery (McGuire et al. Reference McGuire, Stull, Mueser, Santos, Mook, Nicksic, Rose, White and Salyers2012). These scales have enabled state authorities to monitor programs and to ensure quality. Many of these scales have been widely adopted, and some states require programs to be certified by achieving high fidelity to receive enhanced rates for provision of evidence-based services (SAMHSA, 2015).

A ‘learning community’ is defined as a network of organisations with a shared goal of improving treatment for a specific medical condition, facilitated by regular communication (for example, meetings, teleconferences and newsletters) and collection and dissemination of objective information about procedures and outcomes, with a long-term commitment to quality and expansion (Bond et al. Reference Bond, Drake, Becker and Noel2016). Learning communities build on and systematically integrate the individual implementation strategies identified in Table 1 (prioritising EBPs, fidelity monitoring, training and technical assistance, provision of adequate funding). Learning communities can promote dissemination of information, quality of implementation, sustainment and expansion of evidence-based programs (Bond et al. Reference Bond, Drake, Becker and Noel2016).

The courts have also helped. A 1999 US Supreme Court case – the Olmstead decision – has promoted expansion of evidence-based psychiatric rehabilitation services (Burnim, Reference Burnim2015). Based on the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, the Court ruled that states must provide community services to enable people with disabilities to live in their own homes instead of institutions or congregate facilities. This decision has also been interpreted to encompass full social inclusion. Subsequently, the US Department of Justice has forced numerous states to provide statewide dissemination of a range of evidence-based psychiatric rehabilitation services, including assertive community treatment, supported housing and IPS supported employment (Burnim, Reference Burnim2015).

Conclusions

In the decade ahead, how can psychiatric rehabilitation leaders transform the US service system to actualise the goal of helping people with serious mental illness lead productive, meaningful and satisfying lives and full integration into the community? The failure to implement our service systems to align with this vision is not for lack of an evidence base. The core principles of psychiatric rehabilitation and associated EBPs have been well described (Corrigan et al. Reference Corrigan, Mueser, Bond, Drake and Solomon2008). Change must come from political action. People with psychiatric impairments, their families and their many supporters, unshackled from stigma, will need to demand better services – high quality, evidence-based, person-centred services – rather than ideological tropes. Training institutions, providers and state and local infrastructures will transform when the public demands reach a threshold.

Financial Support

The authors received no financial support to write this editorial from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Conflict of Interest

None.

References

Anthony, WA (1993). Recovery from mental illness: the guiding vision of the mental health service system in the 1990s. Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 16, 1123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bond, GR, Drake, RE (2015). The critical ingredients of assertive community treatment: an update. World Psychiatry 14, 240242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bond, GR, Peterson, AE, Becker, DR, Drake, RE (2012). Validating the revised individual placement and support fidelity scale (IPS-25). Psychiatric Services 63, 758763.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bond, GR, Drake, RE, Becker, DR, Noel, VA (2016). The IPS learning community: a longitudinal study of sustainment, quality, and outcome. Psychiatric Services 67, 864869.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bruns, EJ, Kerns, SE, Pullmann, MD, Hensley, SW, Lutterman, T, Hoagwood, KE (2016). Research, data, and evidence-based treatment use in state behavioral health systems, 2001–2012. Psychiatric Services 67, 496503.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burnim, I (2015). The promise of the Americans with Disabilities Act for people with mental illness. Journal of the American Medical Association 313, 22232224.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cook, JA, Copeland, ME, Floyd, CB, Jonikas, JA, Hamilton, MM, Razzano, L, Carter, TM, Hudson, WB, Grey, DD, Boyd, S (2012). A randomized controlled trial of effects of Wellness Recovery Action Planning on depression, anxiety, and recovery. Psychiatric Services 63, 541547.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Corrigan, PW, Mueser, KT, Bond, GR, Drake, RE, Solomon, P (2008). Principles and Practice of Psychiatric Rehabilitation: An Empirical Approach. Guilford Press: New York.Google Scholar
Davidson, L, Shahar, G, Stayner, DA, Chinman, MJ, Rakfeldt, J, Tebes, JK (2004). Supported socialization for people with psychiatric disabilities: lessons from a randomized controlled trial. Journal of Community Psychology 32, 453477.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deegan, PE (1988). Recovery: the lived experience of rehabilitation. Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal 11, 1119.Google Scholar
Dixon, LB, Dickerson, FB, Bellack, AS, Bennett, M, Dickinson, D, Goldberg, RW, Lehman, A, Tenhula, WN, Calmes, C, Pasillas, RM, Peer, J, Kreyenbuhl, J (2010). The 2009 Schizophrenia PORT psychosocial treatment recommendations and summary statements. Schizophrenia Bulletin 36, 4870.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drake, RE, Essock, SM (2009). The science-to-service gap in real-world schizophrenia treatment: the 95% problem. Schizophrenia Bulletin 35, 677678.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drake, RE, Whitley, R (2014). Recovery and severe mental illness: description and analysis. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 59, 236242.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drake, RE, Goldman, HH, Leff, HS, Lehman, AF, Dixon, L, Mueser, KT, Torrey, WC (2001). Implementing evidence-based practices in routine mental health service settings. Psychiatric Services 52, 179182.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drake, RE, Skinner, J, Goldman, HH (2008). What explains the diffusion of treatments for mental illness? American Journal of Psychiatry 165, 13851392.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drake, RE, Bond, GR, Essock, SM (2009). Implementing evidence-based practices for people with schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Bulletin 35, 704713.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Finnerty, MT, Rapp, CA, Bond, GR, Lynde, DW, Ganju, VJ, Goldman, HH (2009). The state health authority yardstick (SHAY). Community Mental Health Journal 45, 228236.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gilmer, TP, Stefancic, A, Sklar, M, Tsemberis, S (2013). Development and validation of a housing first fidelity survey. Psychiatric Services 64, 911914.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnson-Kwochka, AV, Bond, GR, Drake, RE, Becker, DR, Greene, MA (submitted). Prevalence and quality of Individual Placement and Support (IPS) supported employment in the U.S.Google Scholar
Kim, SJ, Bond, GR, Becker, DR, Swanson, SJ, Reese, SL (2015). Predictive validity of the Individual Placement and Support Fidelity Scale (IPS-25): a replication study. Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation 43, 209216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kreyenbuhl, J, Nosse, IR, Dixon, LB (2009). Disengagement from mental health treatment among individuals with schizophrenia and strategies for facilitating connections to care: a review of the literature. Schizophrenia Bulletin 35, 696703.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, T, Goldberg, RW, Braude, L, Dougherty, RH, Daniels, AS, Ghose, SS, George, P, Delphin-Rittmon, ME (2014). Supported employment: assessing the evidence. Psychiatric Services 65, 1623.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McGuire, AB, Stull, LG, Mueser, K, Santos, M, Mook, A, Nicksic, C, Rose, N, White, L, Salyers, MP (2012). Development and reliability of an illness management and recovery clinical competence measure. Psychiatric Services 63, 772778.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHugo, GJ, Drake, RE, Whitley, R, Bond, GR, Campbell, K, Rapp, CA, Goldman, HH, Lutz, WJ, Finnerty, MT (2007). Fidelity outcomes in the National Implementing Evidence-Based Practices Project. Psychiatric Services 58, 12791284.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Monroe-DeVita, M, Teague, GB, Moser, LL (2011). The TMACT: a new tool for measuring fidelity to assertive community treatment. Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association 17, 1729.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Olfson, M, Pincus, HA, Pardes, H (2013). Investing in evidence-based care for the severely mentally ill. Journal of the American Medical Association 310, 13451346.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rog, DJ, Marshall, T, Dougherty, RH, George, P, Daniels, AS, Ghose, SS, Delphin-Rittmon, ME (2014). Permanent supportive housing: assessing the evidence. Psychiatric Services 65, 287294.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sackett, DL, Rosenberg, WM, Gray, JA, Haynes, RB, Richardson, WS (1996). Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't. BMJ 312, 71, doi: http://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.312.7023.71.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
SAMHSA (2015). Case Studies of Three Policy Areas and Early State Innovators: 2014 State Profiles of Mental Health and Substance use Disorder Agencies. HHS Publication No. SMA-15-4418. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration: Rockville, MD.Google Scholar
Seffrin, B, Panzano, PC, Roth, D (2009). What gets noticed: how barrier and facilitator perceptions relate to the adoption and implementation of innovative mental health practices. Community Mental Health Journal 44, 475484.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Squires, D, Anderson, C (2015). U.S. health care from a global perspective: spending, use of services, prices, and health in 13 countries. The Commonwealth Fund. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/Boston.Google Scholar
Torrey, WC, Bond, GR, McHugo, GJ, Swain, K (2012). Evidence-based practice implementation in community mental health settings: the relative importance of key domains of implementation activity. Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research 39, 353364.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wang, PS, Lane, M, Olfson, M, Pincus, HA, Wells, KB, Kessler, RC (2005). Twelve-month use of mental health services in the United States: results from the National Comorbidity Survey replication. Archives of General Psychiatry 62, 629640.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wiltsey Stirman, S, Kimberly, J, Cook, N, Calloway, A, Castro, F, Charns, M (2012). The sustainability of new programs and innovations: a review of the empirical literature and recommendations for future research. Implementation Science 7, 17. doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-17.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Operational definitions for implementation/sustainability factor domains