34 min

Primary Care: #6 Emerging Adults with Mental Illness Health Hats, the Podcast

    • Medicine

Discover how PCP Dr. Bonnie Engelbart manages the referral maze & limited resources when caring for emerging adults with mental illness.



Blog subscribers: Listen to the podcast here. Scroll down through show notes to read the post.





Subscribe to Health Hats, the Podcast, on your favorite podcast player

This episode can be watched on YouTube





Episode Notes

Prefer to read, experience impaired hearing or deafness?

Find FULL TRANSCRIPT at the end of the other show notes or download the printable transcript here

Contents with Time-Stamped Headings

to listen where you want to listen or read where you want to read (heading. time on podcast xx:xx. page # on the transcript)



Proem.. 1



Podcast intro 01:26. 2



Health is fragile 02:00. 2



Primary care practice at Cambridge Health Alliance 05:31. 3



Screening for mental illness 06:29. 3



The referral maze 08:10. 3



Team building 11:40. 4



Toll on staff 14:02. 4



The burden of stigma, lack of resources, barriers to continuity 14:41. 5



Need more bodies 17:00. 5



Care partners 18:31. 5



A word from our sponsor, Abridge 19:27. 6



Complex time 20:09. 6



Changes over the past twenty years 21:27. 6



Self-medication 22:56. 7



Questions for emerging adults 24:03. 7



Questions for administrators 25:27. 7



The burden of cost to families 27:19. 7



Culture and language 28:09. 8



Reflection 30:35. 8



Next #7 Emergency medicine: We’re not trained for this 32:25. 9



Podcast Outro 33:02. 9

Please comment and ask questions







at the comment section at the bottom of the show notes

on LinkedIn 

via email

YouTube channel 

DM on Instagram, Twitter, Mastadon to @healthhats



Credits

Music on intro and outro by permission from Joey van Leeuwen, Drummer, Composer, Arranger including Moe's Blues for Proem and Reflection



Web and Social Media Coach, Dissemination Kayla Nelson @lifeoflesion



Intro photo of Vulture Couple by Rich Rieger used with permission



Photo of Swaziland by Ndumiso Silindza on Unsplash



Images of emerging adult with mental illness and community collaboration from DALL.E



The views and opinions presented in this podcast and publication are solely my responsibility and do not necessarily represent the views of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute®  (PCORI®), its Board of Governors, or Methodology Committee. Danny van Leeuwen (Health Hats)

Sponsored by Abridge

Inspired by and grateful to Laura Zucker, Mike Herndon, Sue Donnelley, Luc Pelletier

 

Links

World Health Organization (WHO) Adolescent Mental Health



Most mental health concerns, especially for emerging adults, first present in primary care, placing them in a critical role for addressing these concerns.



The PSC-17 Pediatric System Checklist is a brief questionnaire that helps identify and assess changes in emotional and behavioral problems in children



When kids turn 18, we transition to a form called the AWQ, Cambridge Health Alliance Adult Wellbeing Scale, which screens for depression, anxiety, and substance use.



National Alliance of Mental Health: Kids, Teens, and Young Adults,



White House Fact Sheet: Improving Access and Care for Youth Mental Health and Substance Abuse Conditions,



American Academy of Family Practice (AAFP) article, Managing Behavioral Health Issues in Primary Care: Six Five-Minute Tools.



Related podcasts

Discover how PCP Dr. Bonnie Engelbart manages the referral maze & limited resources when caring for emerging adults with mental illness.



Blog subscribers: Listen to the podcast here. Scroll down through show notes to read the post.





Subscribe to Health Hats, the Podcast, on your favorite podcast player

This episode can be watched on YouTube





Episode Notes

Prefer to read, experience impaired hearing or deafness?

Find FULL TRANSCRIPT at the end of the other show notes or download the printable transcript here

Contents with Time-Stamped Headings

to listen where you want to listen or read where you want to read (heading. time on podcast xx:xx. page # on the transcript)



Proem.. 1



Podcast intro 01:26. 2



Health is fragile 02:00. 2



Primary care practice at Cambridge Health Alliance 05:31. 3



Screening for mental illness 06:29. 3



The referral maze 08:10. 3



Team building 11:40. 4



Toll on staff 14:02. 4



The burden of stigma, lack of resources, barriers to continuity 14:41. 5



Need more bodies 17:00. 5



Care partners 18:31. 5



A word from our sponsor, Abridge 19:27. 6



Complex time 20:09. 6



Changes over the past twenty years 21:27. 6



Self-medication 22:56. 7



Questions for emerging adults 24:03. 7



Questions for administrators 25:27. 7



The burden of cost to families 27:19. 7



Culture and language 28:09. 8



Reflection 30:35. 8



Next #7 Emergency medicine: We’re not trained for this 32:25. 9



Podcast Outro 33:02. 9

Please comment and ask questions







at the comment section at the bottom of the show notes

on LinkedIn 

via email

YouTube channel 

DM on Instagram, Twitter, Mastadon to @healthhats



Credits

Music on intro and outro by permission from Joey van Leeuwen, Drummer, Composer, Arranger including Moe's Blues for Proem and Reflection



Web and Social Media Coach, Dissemination Kayla Nelson @lifeoflesion



Intro photo of Vulture Couple by Rich Rieger used with permission



Photo of Swaziland by Ndumiso Silindza on Unsplash



Images of emerging adult with mental illness and community collaboration from DALL.E



The views and opinions presented in this podcast and publication are solely my responsibility and do not necessarily represent the views of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute®  (PCORI®), its Board of Governors, or Methodology Committee. Danny van Leeuwen (Health Hats)

Sponsored by Abridge

Inspired by and grateful to Laura Zucker, Mike Herndon, Sue Donnelley, Luc Pelletier

 

Links

World Health Organization (WHO) Adolescent Mental Health



Most mental health concerns, especially for emerging adults, first present in primary care, placing them in a critical role for addressing these concerns.



The PSC-17 Pediatric System Checklist is a brief questionnaire that helps identify and assess changes in emotional and behavioral problems in children



When kids turn 18, we transition to a form called the AWQ, Cambridge Health Alliance Adult Wellbeing Scale, which screens for depression, anxiety, and substance use.



National Alliance of Mental Health: Kids, Teens, and Young Adults,



White House Fact Sheet: Improving Access and Care for Youth Mental Health and Substance Abuse Conditions,



American Academy of Family Practice (AAFP) article, Managing Behavioral Health Issues in Primary Care: Six Five-Minute Tools.



Related podcasts

34 min