As a practice owner, you want to use every tool possible to help your clients- which is why you’re looking into how to use data to optimize your treatment approach. We tend to think of data-optimized treatment in terms of the two assessment measures we hear about most frequently- mental health screening and outcome measurements. Each of these has proven invaluable in helping therapists chart a course for clients and gauge their progress.
But what practical value does the implementation of mental health screening and outcome measures hold, and where does measurement-based care fit in the scheme of things? Let’s take a look at the differences between mental health screening, outcome measures, and measurement-based care.
Mental Health Screening’s Core Question: What issues may need to be addressed?
What started in WWII as a way to screen out military conscripts has evolved into a routine practice that represents a cornerstone of quality mental healthcare. The primary purpose of mental health screening aims to direct attention to clinical, social, and/or personal health domains that a clinician should be aware of when treating a client.
In the context of general population screening, assessments such as PHQ-9 and GAD-7 are used by healthcare providers at intake or early in treatment as a quick and easy way to assess new clients for potential mental health problem areas. They’re non-intrusive, inexpensive, and can be used by all types of clinicians to assess every single client.
For mental health professionals, mental health screening represents an efficient, intuitive, data-based approach to treatment planning. By administering brief and focused assessments prior to the start of therapy, clinicians gain a sense of both the nature and scope of the mental health concerns clients are bringing with them.
Benefits of integrating mental health screenings into your practice include:
Outcome Measurements’ Core Question: How effective are our treatment services across a population?
While mental health screening is typically the first step in the assessment adoption curve and helps to focus on what to work on during treatment, it doesn’t provide any insight into whether or not treatment is actually working. That’s where outcome measurements typically come into play.
Measuring outcomes consists of administering assessments not just at the start of care, but at critical moments in the treatment journey (i.e., at treatment plan updates and discharge). By comparing average scores when clients enter versus end treatment, mental health organizations can evaluate the actual effectiveness of their treatment services and objectively demonstrate the extent to which clients improve during their time in therapy.
Even more, as mental health moves toward parity with respect to coverage, reimbursement, and value recognition, the field needs to start playing by the same rules as other areas of healthcare. This means that external stakeholders (e.g., insurance companies, and funding agencies) are increasingly demanding that mental health organizations demonstrate their worth by objectively proving their clinical outcomes and quality of care. In a future whereby demonstrable outcomes will produce higher reimbursement rates, the ability to track and report on client outcomes will be essential.
Benefits of measuring the outcomes of your practice include:
Measurement-Based Care’s Core Question: Is my treatment approach working for a specific client?
Measuring-based care represents the pinnacle of outcomes data utilization in behavioral health. Screening assessments are valuable for planning treatment, and outcome assessments help reevaluate efficacy - but measurement-based care aims to utilize the planning and evaluation power of client feedback data at every point in the therapeutic journey.
Measurement-based care is first and foremost a clinical tool. Data is gathered at regular intervals, discussed in the therapy room to help both client and clinician conceptualize progress, and put to use to guide new directions if indicated.
Because measurement-based care includes screening and outcome assessments, it eliminates the need for additional systems to gather intake measurements or prove therapeutic outcomes.
That means that the benefits of implementing measurement-based care include all those listed above, plus it:
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