Background
IBD is an umbrella term for Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. Approximately 1.3% of U.S. adults live with IBD, and average hospitalization costs can range from $11k to $13k per patient.See our clinicaltrials.gov and PCORI® project descriptions for more details.
Health Care Challenge
IBD patients often have coexisting behavioral health issues, including depression or anxiety, which can exacerbate physical health symptoms and negatively impact quality of life. Additionally, there is a shortage of health care specialists to treat this complex, chronic condition that often requires care from multiple clinicians. Specialty medical homes (SMH), or locations in which patients receive team-based care from clinicians within a single office, may help to overcome these challenges. However, questions remain around how to organize and deliver care most effectively and sustainably.
Goals
- Provide useful information to health systems and providers on available options for supporting individuals with IBD to make patient-centered health care choices.
- Develop a “how-to” toolkit to support implementation and dissemination of the IBD SMH and scale to other types of providers, health systems, and chronically ill populations.
Implementation Approach
Population
Patients aged 18-60 years diagnosed with both inflammatory bowel disease and anxiety and/or depression.
Methodology
This randomized controlled trial will compare the impact of two team-based methods for integrating physical and behavioral health services for people with IBD and anxiety/depression.
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TEAM: Patients receive care in an intensive high-human touch multidisciplinary clinical team model, which may include regular appointments with gastroenterologists, nurse practitioners, psychologists, psychiatrists, dietitians, social workers, and pharmacists. The number of visits varies and is based on the severity of patient IBD and behavioral health symptoms, and may occur either in person, over the phone, or via televideo.
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TECH: Patients have access to the multidisciplinary team members mentioned above, though they meet for formal appointments with their behavioral health providers less frequently. They are provided with access to a digital cognitive behavioral therapy mobile application (app) designed to help develop skills related to coping with anxiety and/or depression. Embedded health care coaches help direct and monitor their progress and relay any concerns or improvements to the clinical team.
Participants complete surveys at the time of enrollment and at 6 and 12-month timepoints to report on changes in physical and behavioral health disease severity, functional impairment, healthcare use, quality of life, and patient disease self-management.
Both participants and clinical staff completed qualitative interviews to share feedback on challenges and benefits to engaging and/or implementing the TEAM and TECH approaches.
The study design, implementation, and results interpretation are advised by site working groups made up of clinicians, patients, and researchers, a patient co-investigator with clinical and health systems experience, and an advisory board of health providers, caregivers, patients, researchers, payers, policy makers, and community organizations.
To learn more, contact us at IBDStudy@upmc.edu.
Research reported on this webpage was funded through a Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute® (PCORI®) Award (IHS-2017C3-8930). The views, statements, and opinions presented in this webpage are solely the responsibility of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the PCORI®. The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute® (PCORI®) is an independent, nonprofit organization authorized by federal law. Its mission is to fund research that will provide patients, their caregivers, and clinicians with the evidence-based information needed to make better-informed healthcare decisions. PCORI® is committed to continually seeking input from a broad range of stakeholders to guide its work.
Resources
IBD Study Newsletter Summer 2023
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IBD Study Newsletter Winter 2022
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IBD Study Newsletter Summer 2022
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IBD Study Newsletter Winter 2021
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IBD Study Newsletter Spring 2021
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IBD Study Newsletter Fall 2020
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IBD Study Newsletter May 2020
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