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Managing Depression and Anxiety in the outpatient setting

Depression and anxiety needs concise assessment at the outpatient setting. Some patients who receive care at outpatient clinics may be challenged with depression/anxiety and/or other mental health disorders as well as with chronic complex medical conditions. These patients may find it very challenging to manage both conditions. They may feel comfortable to talk about their medical conditions to their providers and not their mental health struggles. They may turn to under-reports or do not report their mental health struggles to their providers. The behaviors/attitudes of patients in under-reporting their mental health challenges may affect their general overall management of their health. I would like student(s) who are interested in this topic to do something along the lines of a qualitative interview with physicians and patients about barriers to the assessment and management of anxiety and/or depression in primary care. Student (s) may like to identify common themes in these barriers, which in turn, could lead to suggestible/recommendable ideas for intervention.

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Project Impact(s): Education, Mental Health

This project is in Develop Phase.

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Collaborators, Project Type, Impacts, Related Projects

 


Collaborators 

Lead Organization: Mayo Clinic IBH/ECH Social Work

Contact: Florence Njoyi ; Email: TBD ; Phone: 651 592 6614

Known/Likely Collaborators: Mayo Clinic IBH/ECH Social Work

Potential Collaborators: Rochester Community Initiative (RCI)


Related Projects


Impacts 

Major Impact: 

PlanScape Impacts :

Level 1: Education, Mental Health

Level 2:

DMC Impacts:

Community Health Impacts:

Mental Health


Type of Project

Programming  

 


 

Detailed Description

Depression and anxiety needs concise assessment at the outpatient setting.

Some patients who receive care at outpatient clinics may be challenged with depression/anxiety and/or other mental health disorders as well as with chronic complex medical conditions. These patients may find it very challenging to manage both conditions.  They may feel comfortable to talk about their medical conditions to their providers and not their mental health struggles.  They may turn to under-reports or do not report their mental health struggles to their providers. The behaviors/attitudes of patients in under-reporting their mental health challenges may affect their general overall management of their health.

I would like student(s) who are interested in this topic to do something along the lines of a qualitative interview with physicians and patients about barriers to the assessment and management of anxiety and/or depression in primary care. Student (s) may like to identify common themes in these barriers, which in turn, could lead to suggestible/recommendable ideas for intervention.

 

Strategy
Unknown

 

 

 

Metrics
Unknown

 

 

Last modified by support on 2022/12/01
Created by support on 2014/10/04

 

 

 

Site Information
Project Phase Definitions
The following defines the various project phases:
  1. Available - a product, program or service is in production
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  4. Concept Phase - idea scoped out with enough details to give an early sizing and/or to build a proof of concept
    demonstration
  5. Pre-concept Phase - an early idea or a requirement.
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