Is “Medication Visit” a Misnomer? Psychotherapy Challenges in 90862
In this exploratory study, six clinicians were interviewed in depth regarding the ten patients they saw most recently for medication visits, yielding a total of 60 visits. Patients presenting for the first time were excluded. Interviews were conducted between January and June 2010. The clinicians, aged 50 to 65 years, included four women and two men, all Caucasian. Five were psychiatrists, and one was a nurse practitioner. All prescribing clinicians provided direct patient care for at least 20 hours a week, and their years in practice ranged from five to 30.
The 60 patients, whose ages ranged from 19 to 78 years, included 29 men and 31 women. Their diagnoses were major depressive disorder (N=23, 38%), bipolar or schizoaffective disorder (N=18, 30%), anxiety disorders (N=9, 15%), psychoses (N=3, 5%), and eating disorders (N=3, 5%). One patient (2%) had dissociative disorder, one had dementia, and one had attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.
Forty-one patients (68%) brought up psychological problems during their visit, mostly interpersonal conflicts and life changes (for example, retirement or a new role as a caregiver). For each of the six clinicians, the number of patients who raised psychological problems ranged from five to eight. Of the 41 patients who raised these problems, 14 (34%) had a psychotherapist. Seventy percent of the visits (42 of 60 visits) exceeded the stipulated 15- to 20-minute limit. For the patients with no psychotherapist, referral to conventional psychotherapy was limited by logistical issues, insurance coverage, and language or cultural barriers; some patients were resistant to referral because of their good rapport with their prescribing clinician. Experienced clinicians appear to have developed their own styles of brief psychotherapy to manage the psychological issues that arise during medication visits. However, the 45- to 50-minute model of the psychotherapy session that is currently taught in residency programs does not adequately prepare the novice psychiatrist. Given that the medication visit of 15 to 20 minutes is now the context in which psychiatrists are most likely to provide psychotherapy, residency training should be adapted to teach briefer techniques that are better suited to this time frame. Further, the explicit use of brief therapeutic interventions during the medication visit might make psychotherapy more accessible to patients and improve outcomes.
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