Abstract
Depression among pregnant and postpartum women (i.e., perinatal depression) is the number one complication of childbirth.
The Allegheny County Maternal Depression Initiative aimed to bridge gaps between physical and behavioral health care and improve
the capacity of local systems of care for identifying and treating women at high risk for perinatal depression. To achieve
these goals, the collaborative adopted a community-based model of systems change focused on women enrolled in the local Medicaid
managed care system. Although the systems change protocol included a number of strategies for enhancing communication at all
levels of care, variations in health information technology (HIT) capacities and/or capabilities across initiative partners
frequently prevented optimal implementation of these strategies. Here, we present an overview of the results of the initiative,
share insights from the collaborative regarding how HIT could have improved those results, and offer recommendations related
to ways to effectively leverage HIT to integrate physical and behavioral health care.
The Allegheny County Maternal Depression Initiative aimed to bridge gaps between physical and behavioral health care and improve
the capacity of local systems of care for identifying and treating women at high risk for perinatal depression. To achieve
these goals, the collaborative adopted a community-based model of systems change focused on women enrolled in the local Medicaid
managed care system. Although the systems change protocol included a number of strategies for enhancing communication at all
levels of care, variations in health information technology (HIT) capacities and/or capabilities across initiative partners
frequently prevented optimal implementation of these strategies. Here, we present an overview of the results of the initiative,
share insights from the collaborative regarding how HIT could have improved those results, and offer recommendations related
to ways to effectively leverage HIT to integrate physical and behavioral health care.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-4
- DOI 10.1007/s13142-011-0020-8
- Authors
- Ellen Burke Beckjord, University of Pittsburgh and RAND Corporation, 4570 Fifth Avenue, Suite 600, Pittsburgh, PA USA
- Donna J Keyser, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Health Plan, 112 Washington Place, Pittsburgh, PA 15219, USA
- Dana Schultz, RAND Corporation, 4570 Fifth Avenue, Suite 600, Pittsburgh, PA USA
- Susan L Lovejoy, RAND Corporation, 4570 Fifth Avenue, Suite 600, Pittsburgh, PA USA
- Raymond Firth, University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development, 400 N. Lexington Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15208, USA
- Harold Alan Pincus, Columbia University, New York, NY USA
- Journal Translational Behavioral Medicine
- Online ISSN 1613-9860
- Print ISSN 1869-6716