Background
The Centers for Families and Children is a CMHC in Cleveland, Ohio. It serves more than 5,000 clients at five sites located throughout greater Cleveland and is one of the largest providers of mental health care in the area. Three of the five sites are located in the city. The largest of the three is the downtown office, which is in a concentrated area of long-term, severe economic depression. The other two sites are located away from the city center in communities where circumstances are significantly less dire. Psychiatric appointment nonadherence at the downtown office is 30%−40%, compared with 20%−30% at the other four offices.
The clinician productivity measure used by the Centers for Families and Children is face-to-face time with patients. In January 2010, productivity rates hovered between 45% and 50%, a rate that was not sustainable on the basis of billing rates for Ohio Medicaid. Minimal differences in productivity were noted among the different types of prescribers: physicians, nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, and physician assistants.
A query about productivity was sent to the e-list of the American Association of Community Psychiatrists (AACP) in May 2011. Association members from CMHCs around the country reported productivity between 60% and 80%, depending on the size of the local pool of psychiatrists and how much time an agency wanted psychiatrists to spend in roles other than direct service provision. Productivity below 50% was broadly deemed unacceptable. These results underscored the need for the Centers for Families and Children to address its problem of appointment nonadherence.
Intervention
The centers had previously tried phone calls, complimentary transportation, and same-day appointments with minimal perceived effect (results were not robustly measured). Administrators were concerned that an increase in the number of appointments scheduled each day would create uneven wait times or shorten the duration of appointments, negatively affecting client satisfaction and outcomes.
After further discussion, staff members became aware of the significant incongruence between the structure of the service delivery system, which offered scheduled, office-based appointments, and the service use patterns of consumers, who frequently received unscheduled care in emergency departments and inpatient settings. Although walk-in clinics and field-based visits have been part of the psychiatric delivery system for decades, the staff was unaware of any widely implemented service delivery model based on service consumption rather than on symptoms.
AACP e-list dialogue
Staff of the centers decided to ask members of the AACP e-list two additional questions: What experience, if any, have you had with robust, walk-in–based services? Even if you have not had experience, what are your thoughts on the subject?
Responses fell into three groups. The first group echoed the centers’ struggles with the problem of appointment nonadherence. As one respondent said, “I vacillate between a dedicated clinic as you describe and having a daily rolling walk-in option where clients are plugged into no-show slots. The dedicated clinic has the potential to result in large amounts of down time, but the continuous option has the potential to really screw up the flow of patients and inconvenience clients who come on time for their appointments.”
As medical director at the Centers for Families and Children, I responded, “It’s an interesting quandary precisely because of the potential physician down time … [but] we have a huge patient population … [which is] really bad at keeping appointments, and [this] gums up the schedule. If we could reduce the number of no-shows enough to raise productivity 5%–10% per provider, it might justify the cost.”
The second group of respondents also echoed the centers’ experience but emphasized that the key to success was management of the waiting area. One respondent offered the following guidance: “Be sure to use a lot of groups so as not to waste time and to be as cost-effective as possible. … One is a group for walk-in initial evaluations, where a nonpsychiatrist does a one-to-one screen … followed by very successful medication groups run by a psychiatrist and a nurse… . The nurse takes some patients out of the group for one-on-one reviews … [and] the rest of the group continues. … The group excludes consumers who are paranoid and narcissistic. Coffee and educational videos are available for those who wait.”
Another respondent in this second group described several creative ways of coping in which he had participated in the 1970s and 1980s: “A ticket provided something that most everyone wanted … food, coffee, and informal time with groups of other patients, CMHC line staff, psychiatrists and nurses.” Another respondent noted, “Often overlooked is the comfort of the waiting area … having coffee, comfortable seats and space, forms to fill out, and other engaging activities while waiting for the evaluator encourages patients to stick around. Think of how primary care does it: the patient gets put in a room, screened by the medical assistant, forms are filled out, vitals are taken, and then the clinician breezes in without having to go find the patient in the waiting room.”
A third approach to the problem was represented by the response of a single e-list member, who described an experience that was somewhat similar to that of the centers: “I have long believed that on-demand service can play a significant role with our population given that people in general keep doctor appointments only when they have a perceived need. … We’ve recently responded to funding cuts with an expansion of access on a walk-in basis. … This walk-in capacity is also becoming the de facto ongoing treatment relationship for individuals who have difficulty keeping appointments.”
I asked this respondent, “Do you have a dedicated walk-in clinic, or are you mixing walk-in time with all your prescribing staff?” The respondent replied, “We have a couple of dedicated walk-in sites, but the big shift was our development of walk-in capacity throughout our system—i.e., at adult clinic sites where previously it could take weeks to get an evaluation appointment.… Our efforts to be more responsive to primary care [are] a crucial component in our efforts to work toward integrated care with them.”
This respondent made several other suggestions on the basis of his experience: “Because of long wait times, client expectations must be managed. When demand exceeds capacity, some less acute clients could be asked to come back the next day. It’s challenging to ensure that money isn’t being wasted on staffing for hours during which the demand for services turns out to be (unpredictably) low. Staff working conditions are dramatically changed, and a new flexibility is required to which some staff have considerable trouble adapting.”
The AACP e-list discussion was notable for its lack of negative responses. In particular, no respondent described negative experiences in implementing such a model, nor did any respondent suggest that trying the model would be a bad idea.