PsychiatricTimes Members: Login | Register

|     

PsychiatricTimes SearchMedica Medline Drugs

Powered by SearchMedica

 
Risk Assessment
News
Current Issues
Blogs
Special Reports
CME
Conferences
Resources
Careers
Multimedia
About Us
 

Home »

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 27 No. 8
NEWS 

45,000 More Psychiatrists, Anyone?

by Daniel Carlat, MD | August 3, 2010
Dr Carlat is associate clinical professor of psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston and editor in chief of The Carlat Psychiatry Report—a monthly newsletter on psychopharmacology. The Carlat Psychiatry Blog (www.carlatpsychiatry.blogspot.com) is consistently ranked as one of the 10 most influential health blogs. Dr Carlat is also a regular contributor to “The Couch In Crisis” blog on www.psychiatrictimes.com where this commentary is posted.

Houston, we have a problem. There is a critical shortage of psychiatrists. And the problem is not in Houston alone-- it includes the entire state of Texas, and every other state in the union (Mid-town Manhattan, Boston-- Beacon Hill, and Sacramento Street in San Francisco might be exceptions).

According to the most recent of studies commissioned by the government, America is shy about 45,000 psychiatrists. And the shortage will get worse, because many psychiatrists are reaching retirement age.

Before commenting on possible solutions, let's get a better fix on where this rather astounding number comes from. After all, labor statistics are politically charged quantities because they are often used as ammunition for various stakeholders to win funding for pet programs. So it's important to be skeptical.

The underlying data were published as a series of 3 articles in the October 2009 issue of Psychiatric Services. The research was commissioned by the Health Resources and Services Administration and was done by researchers at the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Here I'll focus on the study by Konrad and colleagues,1 since it provides a good overview of the entire project. To facilitate ease of reading, I am not including all the references to other studies discussed in the original paper. I urge interested readers to peruse the original article for more details.

These researchers started with what they considered to be the most reliable recent estimates of the prevalence of mental illness in this country--the National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R) of 2001. That study was a random house-to-house survey of more than 9000 people. The authors did not want to simply use the NCS-R's figures at face value because that would have included many people whose mental illnesses are not particularly severe. Instead, they identified only those people who were functionally impaired and who had what they defined as "serious" mental illness--bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, agoraphobia, generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, social phobia, or specific phobia.

You'll notice some glaring omissions here--most notably schizophrenia, substance abuse, and ADHD. Why weren't these included? There are various reasons, some having to do with the quality of the data they had to work with. The NCS-R data, oddly enough, did not include enough questions to reliably diagnose schizophrenia, so the researchers decided they could not come up with reliable prevalence numbers for schizophrenia. What about substance abuse? While the NCS-R data included substance abuse, there is little reliable data on how many substance abuse clinicians are out there, so they omitted this diagnosis from their analysis. And then there were a number of diagnoses the authors considered not serious enough to include--such as ADHD, conduct disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, dysthymia, and a few others.

The bottom line is that given the exclusion of many patients with disorders that required some kind of treatment, the study results are necessarily very conservative. Whatever shortage of services they discover will need to be amplified to make up for these uncounted patients. Nonetheless, using their particularly strict and conservative criteria, they estimated that the 1-year prevalence of "serious mental illness" in the US is 3.9%. The authors note that this estimate is very close to other recent estimates of the prevalence of significant disabling mental illness.

How much mental health treatment do these patients need? Using more data from NCS-R, the researchers stated that "about half of adults with serious mental illness used services; they typically spent 10.54 hours per year (95% confidence interval (CI), 5.46 to 15.63) with nonprescriber mental health professionals and 4.38 hours per year (CI, 3.40 to 5.37) with primary care physicians or prescriber mental health professionals."

Do these numbers sound right? Essentially, they are saying that patients with serious mental illness have about 1 therapy visit per month, and about 20 minutes per month of psychopharm-oriented visits with some prescriber. It sounds fairly realistic as an average, considering that some "stable" patients probably never see a therapist and just see their psychiatrist every 3 months or so for a medication refill, while on the other end of the spectrum, there are very ill patients who have at least weekly therapy sessions and biweekly psychopharmacological visits.

So how many mental health providers are needed? Now that the researchers estimated the number of patients with mental illness, the number of hours of care needed on average by each patient, and the amount of care provided by the average full-time clinician (I don't have the space to detail how they got that statistic, but it was derived from various surveys of practice patterns from the APA and other sources), they could calculate the bottom line--how many clinicians does the US need to treat its mentally ill citizens? They estimated that we need 25.9 psychiatrists per 100,000 population. This is an average number, which varies by county--typically, poorer people need more psychiatric time, so the need for help is greater in poorer counties.

The problem is that we only have roughly 10 per 100,000 practicing full-time psychiatrists in the US, or about 30,000 total. That's 15 per 100,000 too few, and assuming a population of about 300 million, we arrive at the estimated shortage of 45,000 psychiatrists. This is a very rough estimate to be sure--let's call it 45,000 plus or minus 15,000. Either way, it represents a mental health services crisis.

So--what are we going to do to solve this problem? I'm not sure, but here are some potential options:

1. Let's get the primary care physicians (PCPs) to absorb our excess patients. Sorry, but as family practitioner and writer Michael Victoroff once told me, "that donkey is overloaded already." PCPs are dealing with longer wait lists than psychiatrists and they are coping with a vast array of illnesses to manage. Outcomes research has shown that PCPs don't do the best job of treating psychiatric problems. For example, a recent study found that the mental health care dropout rate from PCPs was 32%--more than double the dropout rate from psychiatrists.2

These data are hardly surprising, since PCPs have barely enough time to hand out a pill and refer to a social worker, psychologist, or psychiatrist. And the psychiatrist will often be either unavailable or will refuse the patient's insurance.

2. Let's churn out more psychiatrists. That means expanding residency programs. That's a nice idea, but who is going to foot the bill? Medicare pays for the vast majority of residency slots in the US, and the going rate is upwards of $100,000 per slot. Is Medicare planning to shell out 45,000 3 $100,000 = $4.5 billion to solve the mental health access problem? Unlikely--in fact, we were lucky that President Obama's health care reform package is allocating $168 million to create only 600 more primary care physician residency slots. Most psychiatry residency directors feel lucky if they can simply hold on to the reimbursed positions they have now.

3. Let's train more advanced practice nurses and physician assistants. That might work over the long term, because the economics are more feasible. Physician extenders' training is shorter and less expensive, their incomes are lower, and they typically are more likely to work for underserved populations. One problem: they get very little training in psychology or psychotherapy--limiting their ability to properly diagnose and treat tough cases.

4. Let's give medically trained psychologists prescriptive authority. Though unpopular among psychiatrists, this is an increasingly viable solution. Psychologists with 2-year psychopharmacology masters degrees have been prescribing safely for 20 years in the military and for slightly less than a decade in New Mexico and Louisiana. (For a thorough review of this issue, see the recently published book Pharmacotherapy for Psychologists: Prescribing and Collaborative Roles.3 Our APA maintains an active and expensive lobbying program in order to defeat prescriptive authority legislation as it surfaces yearly in dozens of states. It may be time for us to reconsider whether this is money well spent. In my opinion, our battle against psychologists prescribing represents a short-sighted attempt to defend our professional turf at the expense of our primary responsibility, which is enhancing our patients' access to high-quality care.

Dr Carlat is associate clinical professor of psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston and editor in chief of The Carlat Psychiatry Report--a monthly newsletter on psychopharmacology. The Carlat Psychiatry Blog (www.carlatpsychiatry.blogspot.com) is consistently ranked as one of the 10 most influential health blogs. Dr Carlat is also a regular contributor to "The Couch In Crisis" blog on www.psychiatrictimes.com where this commentary is posted.

References

1. Konrad TR, Ellis AR, Thomas KC, et al. County-level estimates of need for mental health professionals in the United States. Psychiatr Serv. 2009;60:1307-1314.
2. Olfson M, Mojtabai R, Sampson NA, et al. Dropout from outpatient mental health care in the United States. Psychiatr Serv.2009;60:898-907.
3. McGrath RE, Moore BA, eds. Pharmacotherapy for Psychologists: Prescribing and Collaborative Roles.Washington, DC: American Psychological Association; 2010.

 

Join the Conversation

Want to join the conversation? If you're a healthcare professional, we'd like to hear your comments. Just sign in or register today to become part of our growing, online community.

  • Oldest First
  • Newest First

by elaine nailler | September 05, 2010 12:41 PM EDT

Somehow the name Elaine Nailler was associated with the below post.  The correct author is Mary D Moller.

by elaine nailler | September 05, 2010 12:40 PM EDT

As a psychiatric advanced practice nurse with over 30 years experience in the field-18 with autonomous prescriptive authority privileges in the state of WA-I am dismayed at Dr. Carlatt's reference that we have very little training in psychology or psychotherapy.  It is a gross misrepresentation of skill sets and knowledge bases  to equivocate a PA with a Psychiatric Advanced Practice Nurse. 

 

I am the current President of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association as well as the specialty director for psychiatric mental health nursing programs at the Yale University School of Nursing.  Our students receive intensive course and clinical work in serious and persistent mental illnesses across the lifespan as well as training in a variety of psychotherapeutic modalities.  Psychiatric mental health APRNs are certified by the American Nurses Credentialing Center and are eligible for advanced practice  licensure as either a clinical specialist or nurse practitioner including prescriptive authority in all 50 states-17 of which now have autonomous practice.

by Steven Adelman | September 02, 2010 3:23 PM EDT

Geraldine Koppenaal RN CNS

Psychiatric Nurse Clinical Specialists have been prescribing psychiatric medications for over ten years in the state of MA. Before these professionals attend graduate school for learning to be psychotherapists and prescribe, the have been nursing professionals working in hospitals and medical settings providing care to patients, giving medications for which they know side effects, and they have already understanding of disease states. Graduate programs for psychiatric nurse specialists only further advance their knowlege of anatomy, physiology, disease states,and interactive physical and psychiatric co-morbidity. I believe this puts them at as better advance to be prescribers and "physician extenders" in the future over psychologists. This is why they received licensure to prescribe in MA a decade ago and psychologists have not. I have 32 years experience as a CNS professional providing psychotherapy and prescribing in both a medical association and private practice setting.I also see complex PTSD, schizophrenic, and bi-polar patients.

by Steven Adelman | September 02, 2010 3:13 PM EDT

Clinical Nurse Specialists with masters preparation and certifications have been prescribing  psychiatric medications effectively for over ten years in MA. They are also prescribing in over 35 states.   Prior to their masters degrees, nurses have psychopharmology experience in giving medications for which they know side effects. They have worked as a medical professionals with other medical providers in medical settings. With masters degrees, certification, and further experience, they only improve their knowledge of medical disease, anatomy and physiology, and interactive medical and psychiatric co-mobidity. This make CNS BH nurses very appropiate to diagnose and treat most psychiatric conditions including bi-polar disorder and complex PTSD. Masters prepared CNS BH nurses learn psychotherapy in their graduate programs.  I am one of these professionals and have 32 years experience providing psychotherapy and psychopharmacology in both a medical out patient group practice and in a my own private practice setting.

by Manuel Mota | September 01, 2010 11:48 AM EDT

I think that we should keep it simple: Writing a prescription for a medication follows the making of diagnosis.  Arriving to a diagnosis implies to know about multiple illnesses to rule out maladies that present with similar symptoms.

   For example a twisted ovary can resemble an appendicitis if the affected gland is on the right side.  In other words, it takes medical knowledge to differenciate absence seizures from ADHD (I have seem several cases). By the same token a thyroid dysfunction can present as a "psychiatric case."

   I appreciate the help provided by the prescribing psychologists and pediatrician who treat childhood psychiatric problems but, if I were in their shoes, I would stay away from playing a role for which I am not qualified. Maybe some Forensic psychiatrist or any other expert could enlight us with data on law suits associated with psychiatric medications prescribed by psychologists and pediatricians.  Who knows, maybe I am wrong.

Manuel Mota-Castillo, M.D.

Child psychiatrist

Lake Mary, FL 

Article Comment Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Previous Next






References

1. Konrad TR, Ellis AR, Thomas KC, et al. County-level estimates of need for mental health professionals in the United States. Psychiatr Serv. 2009;60:1307-1314.
2. Olfson M, Mojtabai R, Sampson NA, et al. Dropout from outpatient mental health care in the United States. Psychiatr Serv.2009;60:898-907.
3. McGrath RE, Moore BA, eds. Pharmacotherapy for Psychologists: Prescribing and Collaborative Roles.Washington, DC: American Psychological Association; 2010.


 
TOPIC INDEX

Addiction Medicine
Alzheimer Disease
Anxiety Disorders
ADHD
Bipolar Disorder
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Dementia
Depression
DSM-5
Geriatric Psychiatry

 

Health Care Reform
Major Depressive
Disorder
OCD
Personality Disorders
Schizoaffective Disorder
Schizophrenia
Sleep Disorders
Somatoform Disorders
All Topics

 


 
FROM PHYSICIANS PRACTICE
Five Steps to Improving Patient Access
Judy Capko,  May 21, 2013
Patient access is getting increased attention through reform initiatives. Here are five steps you can take to make sure patients get appropriate access to care in your office.
Growing HIPAA Threat – Ignore Windows XP at Your Own Peril
Marion K. Jenkins,  May 21, 2013
Chances are good that you have some major ticking software time bombs lurking in your medical practice's computer environment, namely Windows XP and Server 2003.
Finding Physician Work-Life Balance in the Small Moments
Jennifer Frank, MD,  May 21, 2013
At my practice and at home, things are always busy. There's laundry or homework, or a patient with needs.
Three Areas to Reduce Costs at Your Medical Practice
Greg Mertz,  May 19, 2013
By taking a hard look at reducing costs for staffing, overhead, and technology at your medical practice, you may see increased physician compensation.
Dos and Don’ts for Starting a Physician Blog
Michael Woo-Ming, MD,  May 18, 2013
Starting a physician blog can provide your medical practice with marketing benefits, but it's important to do it right.
 

 

 
MOST POPULAR
  • Most Popular
  • Most Emailed
  • Most Recent
  • Developmental Psychopathology Comes of Age
  • The Moral Struggles of Practicing Psychiatrists
  • Grief and Depression: The Sages Knew the Difference
  • Update on Mental Health Benefits and Substance Use Disorder Services Under the Affordable Care Act
  • Synthetic Cathinones: Signs, Symptoms, and Treatment
  • Grief and Depression: The Sages Knew the Difference
  • Successful Aging: Strategies to Help Maintain and Nurture a Healthy Brain
  • Synthetic Cathinones: Signs, Symptoms, and Treatment
  • Developmental Psychopathology Comes of Age
  • Psychiatry and the Myth of “Medicalization”
  • Will Your Clinical Records Support You in Court?
  • Refinements in ECT Techniques
  • Successful Aging: Strategies to Help Maintain and Nurture a Healthy Brain
  • Capacity Evaluation in Geriatric Psychiatry: Key Ingredients
  • Eco-Psychiatry: Why We Need to Keep the Environment in Mind
Click here to subscribe to our newsletter
 
COMMENTS
  • Most Commented
  • Most Recent
  • Psychiatry and the Myth of “Medicalization”
  • Grief and Depression: The Sages Knew the Difference
  • Is it Time for a Treatment Manual to Complement DSM-5?
  • Diagnosis and its Discontents: The DSM Debate Continues
  • Lamotrigine for Major Depressive Disorder Is Inappropriate
  • New Insight Into the Neurobiology of Depression
  • Tie One On for Patients
  • NIMH vs DSM 5: No One Wins, Patients Lose
  • Psychiatry and the Myth of “Medicalization”
  • Parity Laws: Powerful Weapon—or Pipe Dream?
Click here to subscribe to our newsletter
 
CAREER CENTER

  •   Featured Jobs  
  •    Resources   
  • Psychiatry and Nurse Practitioner Opportunities
  • Associate Medical Director - Psychiatrist Delray Beach, Florida
  • Retiring Child Psychiatrist Seeks Replacement August 2010 or Before
  • Chairperson, Dept of Psychiatry Needed
  • FT Staff Psychiatrist - Excellent Benefits
  • BC Adult and Child Psychiatrits - PT and FT Positions Available
  • Managing Risks When Practicing in Three-Party Care Settings
  • 12 Tips for Making Your Practice Greener
  • Keys to Avoiding Malpractice: Standard of Care in Psychiatric Practice
  • Take This Job and Shove It
  • Merging Administrative and Academic Careers in Psychiatry
 
SearchMedica SEARCH RESULT

Find peer-reviewed literature and websites for practicing medical professionals

CME on Display
Evidence on Display
Guidelines on Display
Patient Education on Display
Clinical Trials on Display
Practical Articles on Display
Research and Reviews on Display
All "Display" results

CancerNetwork | ConsultantLive | Diagnostic Imaging | Musculoskeletal Network | OBGYN.net | PediatricsConsultantLive |
Physicians Practice | Psychiatric Times | SearchMedica | Medical Resources

© 1996 - 2013 UBM Medica LLC, a UBM company
Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Advertising Information - Editorial Policy Statement - UBM Medica Network Privacy Policy