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Integrated Behavioral Health: Benefits for Patients & Providers
Behavioral health conditions are extremely common, affecting nearly one in five Americans. The annual health care costs for behavioral health conditions amount to $57 billion, on par with cancer. However, behavioral health care is often separated from the primary care system,…
March 18, 2021·rshah
Behavioral health conditions are extremely common, affecting nearly one in five Americans. The annual health care costs for behavioral health conditions amount to $57 billion, on par with cancer. However, behavioral health care is often separated from the primary care system, resulting in a lower standard of care for patients.
Having two, mostly independent care systems in place actually causes higher spending, especially for patients with related physical and behavioral health conditions like anxiety and depression and substance abuse. Instead of receiving proper care, they need to navigate both systems and not entirely receive the proper attention they need.
Integrated Behavioral Health
Through behavioral health integration, behavioral and primary care providers can work together and provide better quality health care using a more holistic approach. This can be used as an advantage that both the patient and the medical provider can benefit from.Benefits of Behavioral Health Integration
A growing body of research shows integrated behavioral health improves health and patient experience. Combining the two systems will likely result in better coordination and communication between medical specialists. The integration can also lead to the reduction of unnecessary costs in time, money, and delays. Some of the benefits include:- Patients with chronic health conditions are more likely to have some other behavioral health concerns that may or may not be connected to the former. It’s easier to improve those chronic conditions when both concerns are also addressed.
- Patients feel it is more socially acceptable and easier to access behavioral health care treatment in a setting they are already familiar with, rather than going to a separate rehabilitation or care center. The consolidation also removes the stigma on patients going into mental care facilities.
- Any medical team in charge of treating the patient’s physical conditions isn’t always trained to handle behavioral-related concerns. Patients are more at ease to learn that behavioral health partners are available to address their problems in the same setting when needed.