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Official Actions
Published Online: 1 October 2016

APA Council Reports

Abstract

At the fall component meetings of the American Psychiatric Association in Crystal City, Va., September 14–17, 2016, the APA councils heard reports from their components. Following are summaries of the activities of the councils and their components.

The Council on Addiction Psychiatry

Frances R. Levin, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Addiction Psychiatry (CAP) is committed to providing psychiatric leadership in the study, prevention, and treatment of substance use disorders. The component provides recommendations to APA on training, treatment, and public policy.
To facilitate effective collaboration and communication, the Council invites representatives of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), and the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) to participate in its meetings. Physician training on treatment of substance use disorders, prescription drug monitoring programs, accessibility and availability of services, budgetary challenges, research priorities, and opportunities for APA to contribute meaningfully to important government initiatives are among the issues addressed by the group.
The national epidemic of prescription drug and heroin abuse remains a major area of focus. Through its active collaboration with APA’s Division of Government Relations, the Council informs and contributes to the association’s legislative and regulatory advocacy efforts. Of significant concern in 2016 were legislative and regulatory proposals aimed at expanding access to medication-assisted treatment of opioid use disorder. The Council’s leadership offered clinical expertise and policy recommendations in meetings with officials of the Department of Health and Human Services and collaborated with APA Administration in the development and submission of formal comments.
The Council offers a variety of training opportunities for psychiatrists and other interested clinicians. Waiver-eligible courses on office-based treatment of opioid use disorder with buprenorphine are offered at APA’s Annual Meeting and the Institute on Psychiatric Services (IPS). With funding from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and NIDA, an online course will be updated in the near future and made available through APA’s online Learning Center.
The waiver-eligible courses were augmented by a monthly webinar series conducted by the association as a partner organization in the SAMHSA-funded Providers’ Clinical Support System for Medication Assisted Treatment (PCSS-MAT). The highly evaluated webinars provide free continuing medical education credit. In the past 18 months, more than 4,000 individuals participated in the live sessions, and many others have accessed the archived recordings through the APA Learning Center, as well as through the program’s dedicated website (www.pcssmat.org). A clinical mentoring system further enhances the training by providing opportunities for psychiatrists and other physicians to consult with members who have recognized expertise in evidence-based medication-assisted treatment of opioid use disorder.
APA is also a partner in the SAMHSA-funded Providers’ Clinical Support System for Opioid Therapies (PCSS-O), a project developed to address the appropriate use of opioids in the treatment of chronic pain, as well as the recognition and treatment of opioid use disorder. More than a dozen medical specialty and stakeholder organizations provide free continuing medical education in support of the program. APA contributes webinars and online case vignettes that can be accessed through the association’s Learning Center and the program’s dedicated website (www.pcss-o.org).
With funding from NIDA, a workgroup was established to identify, evaluate, and make widely available curricula on substance use disorders that can be used to guide and augment the didactics curriculum of general psychiatry residency training programs in accordance with ACGME program requirements. It is comprised of representatives of APA’s Councils on Addiction Psychiatry and Medical Education, the American Association of Directors of Psychiatry Residency Training (AADPRT), as well as early-career psychiatrists and residents. The group is currently identifying and assessing the scope and quality of existing open-source substance use disorders curricula. It plans to design and implement mechanisms to make the curricula available to all residency training programs, execute a communications plan aimed toward chairs of departments of psychiatry and residency training directors, identify gaps in the existing curricula with the goal of developing curricula to address them in a future initiative, and evaluate the project.
The Council vice chair represents the APA and actively participates in an AMA-convened Task Force to Reduce Opioid Abuse, which is comprised of representatives of state medical associations and medical specialty societies. The member organizations recognize that to address the epidemic of prescription drug abuse effectively, physicians should develop and implement strategies to reduce the harm caused by overprescribing of opioids and utilize evidence-based practice in treating pain and substance use disorders. Led by Dr. Patrice Harris, Chair of AMA’s Board and a former member of APA’s Board of Trustees, the Task Force has undertaken initiatives to 1) address substance use disorders as a medical condition; 2) enhance physician training on evidence-based treatment of pain and addiction; 3) increase physicians’ use of prescription drug monitoring programs and provide guidance to policymakers about program features that will ensure provision of clinically significant information; 4) reduce the stigma of substance use disorders; and 5) address overdose prevention through advocacy for increased access to naloxone.
A workgroup of the Council continues to focus on tobacco use disorder. Members include clinical experts and representatives of integrated care, public and community psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, and residency education. It presented several symposia and workshops at both the APA Annual Meeting and IPS, and it facilitates increased attention on tobacco use disorder by contributing to blog posts, web posts, and online and print articles. To further its goals and reach, the group maintains a productive collaborative relationship with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Smoking Cessation Leadership Center, which funded APA’s initial efforts in this area.
At the request of APA’s CEO and Medical Director, a work group on physicians’ health programs was established and is comprised of representatives of the Council on Addiction Psychiatry and the Council on Psychiatry and Law (CPL). In the past year, members reviewed a series of documents related to the scope and functioning of PHP’s and hosted an informative and productive meeting with the leadership of the Federation of State Physician Health Programs that yielded an agreement to collaborate on issues of importance to both groups. Two APA position statements are now being developed. The statement produced by CPL will focus on issues of due process and the CAP statement will focus on issues of confidentiality and the provision of evidence-based treatment.
Members of the Council also revised several APA position statements, including “Adolescent Substance Use,” “Assuring Appropriate Care and Treatment of Pregnant and Newly Delivered Women with Substance Use Disorders,” and “Substance Use Disorders in the Criminal Justice System.”

The Council on Advocacy and Government Relations

Debra A. Pinals, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Advocacy and Government Relations was established in May 2009 as part of the reorganization of APA councils and components. The Council was consolidated to include the charges of the Council on Advocacy and Public Policy, the Committee on Government Relations, and the Committee on Mental Health Care for Veterans and Military Personnel and their Families. The Council also absorbed some of the charges of the former Council on Social Issues and Public Psychiatry. The Committee on Advocacy and Litigation Funding was retained as a corresponding committee.
The Council continues to serve as the APA’s member-led coordinating body for advocacy activities involving federal and state government. Its responsibilities include analyzing problems and opportunities, anticipating needs for advocacy policies, planning government relations strategies, collaborating with district branches/state associations on state matters affecting individuals with mental illness and the profession, providing expert input to APA Administration staff, and actively collaborating with allied groups with shared goals to improve access to quality mental health care.
High-profile events and the continued challenges of access to psychiatric care have fostered intense interest in these issues on the Hill, within the Obama Administration, and in state governments. The Council has remained active helping to advance a number of APA advocacy priorities and guiding APA lobbying activities.

Mental Health Reform

The Council has worked closely with the APA Administration on the development of legislative strategies to prepare for Congressional action on mental health reform this year, in particular H.R. 2646, the Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act, and S. 2680, the Mental Health Reform Act. The Council prioritized policy recommendations to inform APA Administration advocacy during the markup and floor consideration of H.R. 2646. In July, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed the bill with provisions addressing the critical psychiatric workforce shortage, stronger enforcement of mental health parity, and improvements in the coordination of mental health resources at the federal level. APA was strongly supportive of H.R. 2646. The Council has now turned its focus to S. 2680, which may be considered by the full U.S. Senate in September.

Scope of Practice

With the 2016 state legislative sessions largely behind us, it is important to gain a sense of what was done well and what can be improved moving into 2017. The 2016 state legislative sessions brought new resources to the district branches for dealing with psychologists’ scope of practice battles in the states, including the APA regional state government affairs team and the creation of the Unsafe Prescribing toolkit. On the legislative front, sessions kicked off with major bills being introduced in Hawaii, Iowa, New Jersey, New York, and Ohio.
The APA Administration, working closely with the Council and APA membership, brought a new sense of urgency to defeating inappropriate scope of practice measures sought by psychologists. With less than half of the year remaining, it is important to note the major progress made in Hawaii and Iowa. With the help from APA membership, legislation was defeated on the last day of the session in Hawaii, and in Iowa, a compromise was reached that would include the strictest licensure requirements for states with prescribing authority for psychologists.
Nationwide, the legislative trend has continued to focus on allowing psychologists to gain prescriptive authority while short-cutting the education and training necessary to maintain patient safety. APA has continued to broaden the conversation to promote evidence-based alternatives to pervasive mental health access challenges (e.g., expansion of collaborative care models in states with rural health challenges, telepsychiatry implementation, and parity enforcement). The district branches in both Illinois and Iowa will be participating in the rulemaking process, a result of the passage of prescriptive authority bills in Illinois (2014) and Iowa (2016). We expect that the American Psychological Association will continue their efforts to gain such authority in many states, and APA expects active legislation in numerous states in 2017.

Endorsement of Principles for the Provision of Mental and Substance Use Disorder Treatment: A Bill of Rights

The Council has continued their work in amending APA’s 1996 endorsement of the Principles for the Provision of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Treatment Services. The original document was developed by nine major mental health professional organizations, including the American Psychiatric Association, American Nurses Association, American Psychological Association, and National Association of Social Workers. The group’s objective was to define patients’ bill of rights, inclusive of the right to know: benefits available, extent of professional expertise, treatment options, contractual limitations, appeals and grievance procedures, and guaranteed confidentiality. In conjunction with the Council of Healthcare Systems and Financing, the Council has been assigned the responsibility for updating this significant policy model, providing substantive work for consideration by the Joint Reference Committee. The updated position statement is being designed to be a useful resource for patient advocacy.

Implementation of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA)

This spring, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a lengthy proposed rule covering implementation of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA). The APA-supported passage of MACRA was the culmination of over a decade of lobbying from APA and organized medicine to replace the flawed Medicare Sustainable Growth Rate formula. In summary, MACRA merges current Medicare incentive and penalty programs into one payment system, and it provides incentives for physician participation in alternative payment models. The Council continues to work cross-functionally with APA Administration and other APA components to review written comments and provided strategic lobbying guidance and recommendations. More recently, the Council has identified practical challenges, opportunities, and implications for regulatory advocacy on behalf of psychiatry within the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services so that our members can better work within the evolving system’s requirements.

The Committee on Advocacy and Litigation Funding

Originally created in 2002 and re-established in 2009, the Committee on Advocacy and Litigation Funding (Jeff Akaka, M.D., Chairperson) is charged with reviewing requests that involve legislation, litigation, and advocacy. The committee serves as a mechanism to evaluate requests for financial assistance to district branches and state associations and to make recommendations regarding funding through the Council on Advocacy and Government Relations and the Joint Reference Committee to the Board of Trustees. With increased legislative activity and greater focus on state government responsibilities in the changing environment of health care reform, the Council has worked with APA in ensuring support to eligible and approved district branches and state associations as they seek to bolster their advocacy apparatus.

The APA Political Action Committee (APAPAC)

APAPAC (Charles Price, M.D., Chairperson) is governed by a board of directors that is comprised of 13 APA members. APAPAC is the bipartisan political voice of the APA and enables APA to invigorate its patient and professional advocacy activities by supporting candidates for federal office. The PAC works to ensure the election of members of Congress who share mutual principles and goals with APA and who stand up for psychiatry’s position during the legislative process. Another extremely important role of the PAC is to educate other members of Congress as to why they should support positions that are vital to our patients and our profession.
The PAC raised an estimated $325,000 from APA members during the 2014 election cycle. APAPAC has currently raised $449,678 so far in the 2016 election cycle, which is already a 38% increase. Increasing this number is the top priority of APAPAC. Strengthening our political voice is vital to the APA’s advocacy efforts and crucial to the future of our specialty and our patients. APA is near the bottom of physician specialties in money raised. APAPAC has recently introduced the APAPAC Congressional Advocacy Network (CAN) to bring an even greater voice to psychiatry’s advocacy efforts. APA’s CAN program is designed to match a least one APA member to every member of Congress to increase the profession of psychiatry’s impact on the U.S. Congress and advance the cause of mental health in America. APA CAN is designed to help develop, train, and energize a national network of psychiatrists who will commit to communicate and build personal relationships with members of Congress and speak on behalf of the APA on issues facing mental health.

The Council on Children, Adolescents, and Their Families

Joseph Penn, M.D., Chairperson
The work of the Council is directed toward advancing the diagnosis and treatment of children and adolescents with mental health problems. The Council keeps psychiatric issues involving children and adolescents in the forefront of APA policy and works to assist general psychiatrists in learning more about treating or referring pediatric patients.
Per the request of Renee Binder, M.D., the Council provided their input and comments on the letter from the ABPN, which sought input on PGY-4 residents to count rotations completed during their fourth year toward subspecialty certification. The Council is not in support of allowing individuals to count their PGY-4 year for fellowships outside of the existing exemption for those short-tracking into child psychiatry. They expressed concern that trainees might decide not to do child training if there were more fellowship options available. They also noted the importance of a longitudinal psychotherapy training experience that extended into the PGY-4 year for those remaining in adult training. The councils on Medical Education and Life Long Learning, Addiction Psychiatry, Geriatric Psychiatry, Psychiatry and the Law, and Psychosomatic Medicine were also called to respond to this issue.
Members of the Council were involved in various workshops, symposia, and courses at the 2016 Annual Meeting in Toronto. Sessions included the following: The Ultimate Balancing Act: Medicine, Marriage, Motherhood, and Me (Misty Richards, M.D, M.S., Kimberly Gordon, M.D.); Course: Pediatric Psychopharmacology (John T. Walkup, M.D., Chris Kratochvil, M.D., Chris McDougle, M.D., and Karen Wagner, M.D.); Presidential Symposia: Issues for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in the 21st Century (Gregory Fritz, M.D., Joseph Penn, M.D., Karen Dineen Wagner, M.D., Ph.D., Paramjit Joshi, M.D.); The Nightmare of Cyberbullying: A Review and Discussion on Cyberbullying in Middle School Through College Aged Youth (Gabrielle Shapiro, M.D., Isheeta Zalpuri, M.D., James Murphy, M.D., Louis Kraus, M.D.).
Discussion of the risks of online activity and cyber bullying is being led by Council member Caitlin Costello, M.D. The Council is working to develop a position or informational paper toward parents. In addition, the issue of minimum age for juvenile jurisdiction and restricted housing is on the forefront of the Council’s work items.
The APA Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Fellowship is also under the Council’s purview and promotes interest among psychiatry residents in pursuing careers in child and adolescent psychiatry through mentorship and travel scholarships. Recipients of the 2016–2018 fellowship are Drs. Jennifer Dwyer (Yale University), Julia Tan (University of North Carolina), Lila Aboueid (SUNY Downstate Medical Center), Qortni Lang (Columbia University/New York State Psychiatric Institute), and Roberto Montenegro (University of Washington).

The Council on Communications

Drew Ramsey, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Communications is currently developing new communications polices for internal and external APA communications. The policies are designed to encourage full brand compliance and unified messaging across all APA divisions. This is a tremendous undertaking that will ultimately serve to make the communications of the American Psychiatric Association more unified and effective. Fleshing out the details of this document and producing a fully realized work product for review by the Joint Reference Committee (JRC) and APA Assembly will be the main objective of the Council on Communications at the September Components Meeting in the fall of 2016.
The broad objectives of the communications policies document are as follows:
To ensure that all internal and external communications have an explicit purpose and that that purpose is closely aligned with the APA’s Mission and Brand;
To facilitate communication with psychiatrists at all stages of their careers, both members and nonmembers;
To improve the membership experience of APA members; and
To protect the considerable value of APA communications assets.

Internal Communications

Protecting the value of APA communications assets and member information is of paramount importance and a major focus of the forthcoming communications policies document. This can be accomplished by setting clear guidelines for internal and external communication.
Assets like the APA member e-mail list should not be sold or shared with any outside parties. This is one of the most valuable communications assets the APA has, and protecting it serves the organization and our members alike. Direct access to the list within the organization should be restricted to preserve the integrity of the list. It should be regularly maintained and have a clear approval process for outgoing messages established. Guidelines for appropriate use of the e-mail to members must be clearly defined.
Communications to members needs to have a clear, meaningful purpose so that it is most effective and contributes to an overall positive member experience. This issue is being addressed by establishing guidelines for targeted and personalized communication to members. Targeted communications result in more engagement, better retention, and an overall better experience for members.
Members seeking guidance from APA should have easy access to an updated organizational chart, including contact information, to establish means of direct communication from members to the leadership or staff who can best address their concerns.
Keeping the APA governing bodies apprised of APA communications efforts is very important. The forthcoming communications policies document will provide for the regular presentation of communications plans to the APA Board of Trustees and Assembly.
One goal of the communications policies document is to address the need for interactive open communication between APA staff and members. One way this could be addressed is through electronic town halls.
The communications policies document will provide for specific training in communication skills at the time of on-boarding for all national-level leadership at the APA. It will also provide for online training to be available for members in topics like social media, public speaking, and writing for media.
The policies document will seek to unify internal communications at APA by mandating standardized document formats and templates to be used by all departments.

External Communications

The communications policies document will ensure that APA’s external communications, i.e., those with the media and the general public, are managed so that our messaging is clear and decisive and easy to interpret by the lay public. Accordingly, the communications policies document will lay down several guidelines to maximize the effectiveness of APA’s external communications.
As outlined in the APA Operations Manual, the President of the APA and the CEO and Medical Director are the designated spokespersons on official APA positions. In press matters relating directly to the persons holding those positions, other spokespersons may be designated by the APA Office of Corporate Communications and Public Affairs (CCPA). The CCPA maintains a database of APA experts to respond to media inquiries on general mental health topics.
All communications with media members should be considered “on the record,” and official APA spokespersons should act accordingly. Individual APA members speaking to media members are encouraged to adopt the same policy and avoid “off-the-record” conversations.
All requests from media outlets should be directed to the CCPA media relations team, specifically the senior media relations specialist. The CCPA, charged with maintaining relations with members of the press, will decide who should respond and how. The CCPA is also charged with determining whether press releases and media advisories are issued. The CCPA is responsible for crafting media messages, including talking points, press releases, statements, and media advisories. The CCPA is required to respond rapidly to breaking news events as they occur.
The APA uses social media to enhance the image of the APA in support of its mission, vision, values, and strategic goals. Use of social media as a means of official APA communications will be limited to authorized Communications and Marketing personnel who are directly responsible for the various communications, marketing, and outreach efforts of the organization. As outlined in the APA’s policy manual for employees, if an employee identifies her/himself as an employee of the APA on her/his personal social media account or blog, she/he should not post any profane, offensive, or illegal content. The employee is also expected to make it clear that views expressed on social media are personal views and not those of the APA.
The CCPA is charged with developing and maintaining the patient information section of the website as a means of communicating to patients, families, and the general public the latest scientific information on mental disorders and treatment options. The office works with other APA business units, such as the Department of Government Relations, to establish means of ongoing communication with lawmakers, advocacy groups, and other stakeholders.

Branding

The communications policies document will mandate use of the APA name and logo for all internal APA entities and lay down rules or guidelines for prohibited use of the APA name and logo as well. It will establish guidelines and an approval process for modification of the logo, use of the APA seal, and use of the APA logo by district branches and state associations.

Outcome Measurement

The policies document providing for a means of measuring outcomes (e.g., open rates, click rates, views, number of comments submitted, or contacts made) that will be tracked over time to measure effectiveness of APA communications strategies. This will make APA communications plans adaptable and dynamic in a complex and evolving media landscape.

Policy Reassessment and Revision

Regular reassessment of the communications policies document by a subcommittee of the Communications Council, using data-based outcome metrics as a guide, will occur at a defined time period. An updated version of the policies document will be presented to the Joint Reference Council each time an amendment is made to the document.
Collaboration of staff and membership on the communications policy document is an example of the ideal symbiosis we should strive for with our members. It is in the APA’s interest for communications to be member focused, so it was prudent to ask the Council members how APA staff could best serve them and their colleagues. The drafting and eventual adoption of this communications policies document will do much to protect the integrity of APA communications, facilitate member communications, and promote the national of voice of psychiatrists in America.

Focus on Innovation

The Council on Communications also plans to discuss how to further integrate innovative new methods of communicating, such as Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, and Facebook, into APA’s public communications. As these platforms gain an ever-increasing role in society, they have begun to supplant many forms of traditional media as the preferred method of getting information to the general public. The APA is currently active on a number of these platforms already, but new technology and trends are constantly evolving in this space. With this in mind, the Council seeks to understand how the APA can best tailor its message to the unique audiences of these new communication platforms, with the ultimate goal of using them to engage the public in a meaningful, modern dialogue about issues related to mental health and substance use disorders.

The Council on Geriatric Psychiatry

Robert Paul Roca, M.D., M.P.H., Chairperson
The Council on Geriatric Psychiatry provides leadership in the field of geriatric psychiatry and serves as an expert resource to the APA in issues pertaining to the mental health care of older adults. To this end, the Council creates position statements and resource documents, organizes and presents programs at the annual meetings, creates educational materials, assists the APA in its advocacy efforts at the state and federal level, works to raise the level of interest of medical students and residents in the field of geriatric psychiatry, selects and recommends honorees for APA awards in geriatric psychiatry, and serves as a point of contact between the APA and other subspecialty organizations interested in the care of older adults.
The Council’s major activities and initiatives are as listed below.

Development of Position Statements

The Council has collaborated with the Council on Psychosomatic Medicine to draft a position statement on the role of psychiatrists in palliative care. A workgroup consisting of volunteers from both the councils is working on the statement. The workgroup is planning to submit the final draft to the Joint Reference Committee (JRC) for approval in the fall of 2016.
The JRC asked the Council to review an existing position statement entitled “Consensus Statement on Improving the Quality of Mental Health Care in U.S. Nursing Homes: Management of Depression and Behavioral Symptoms Associated with Dementia.” The Council suggested retiring this position statement but strongly supported the need for a statement emphasizing the importance of high-quality mental health care services in the long-term care (LTC) setting. The Council is developing a new statement focusing on the specific role of psychiatrists in systems where LTC services are provided by multidisciplinary teams in which psychiatrists may serve principally as consultants or supervisors. The statement is expected to be ready in September 2016 for submission to the JRC.

Review of the Guidelines on the Use of Antipsychotics to Treat Agitation and Psychosis in Patients With Dementia

The Council reviewed the draft guidelines and provided feedback to the Practice Guidelines Steering Committee. The Council was impressed by the effort made by the guidelines group to create a document built on the foundation of the existing evidence and adherent to the IOM rules. The input of the Council focused on ensuring that the guidelines would prove useful to our members in the field.

Collaboration With the American Association of Geriatric Psychiatrists (AAGP)

This year the Council continued its collaboration with the AAGP on various issues of common interest to the members of both organizations. Council members and the AAGP representatives agreed to continue the conversations on potential collaborative advocacy efforts and connect via regular conference calls. The Council has proposed that the President-Elect of the AAGP be appointed a corresponding member of the Council on an ex officio basis. This will improve the collaboration between the Council and the AAGP and increase the impact of both the APA and the AAGP.

Annual Meeting Submissions

The Council is considering three topics for presentation at the 2017 Annual Meeting. These topics include collaborative care in geriatrics, the role of psychiatrists in palliative care (to be developed in collaboration with the Council on Psychosomatic Medicine), and forensic issues in geriatric psychiatry (including assessing capacity for physical intimacy among persons with dementia). One or more of these may be presented in association with the AAGP.

Response to Requests for Comments on Policy Documents

The Council responded to the requests below for comments on policy documents.

Position Statement on Atypical/Second-Generation Antipsychotic Medications.

The JRC requested that the Council on Geriatric Psychiatry review this statement to ensure that it aligns with the APA Practice Guidelines on Atypical Antipsychotics for use for Dementia. The statement indicated that there are no data on the efficacy of atypical antipsychotics in dementia. The Council feels that it is not correct to say that there are no data on the efficacy of antipsychotics in dementia. There are indeed studies showing efficacy. The problem is that many of these studies also show serious adverse side effects, making their use controversial. The fact that using them in dementia is off-label does not mean that there are no efficacy data. The Council also suggested that the statement suggest research on 1) the efficacy and safety of atypical antipsychotics for geriatric bipolar mania, depression, and maintenance therapy; 2) identifying an adequate or minimum effective dose of atypicals for dementia with agitation/psychosis; and 3) how long treatment with antipsychotics should be continued to ensure safe discontinuation when they are used for agitation/psychosis in dementia.

Action Paper on Making Access to Treatment for Erectile Disorder Available Under Medicare.

This action paper was passed by the Assembly last fall. It then was forwarded to the JRC, where according to the authors its progress was halted because it was not believed to comport with APA's strategic goals. APA government relations staff asked for the opinion of the Council regarding whether in fact the APA should advocate for this change in Medicare policy. The Council supported the paper in principle.

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) New Proposed Regulation on Long-term Care.

The CMS recently released a comprehensive overhaul of long-term care facility requirements. This is the first amendment of its scale and scope in nearly 20 years, and the proposed regulations outline a wide range of new quality and ethics rules for facilities that participate in the Medicare and Medicaid program. Among many other provisions, the proposed rule touches on staffing adequacy and training, psychotropic medication administration and oversight, the discharge process, and a variety of lifestyle issues. The Council reviewed the document and provided feedback to the Department of Government Relations.

ABPN’s Proposed Policy Change: Using PGY-4 Training to Fulfill Subspecialty Requirements.

The ABPN is considering whether to give psychiatry residents the option of using their PGY-4 year of training to also fulfill the requirements for ACGME-accredited subspecialty fellowship training. The Council was asked to provide a response to this proposed policy change. The Council unanimously agreed that psychiatry residents should be given the option of using their PGY-4 year of training to fulfill the requirements of ACGME-accredited subspecialty fellowship training. The Council also voted in favor of allowing residents to take this subspecialty focused PGY-4 year in a different training program.

Geriatric Awards Nominations

The Council is charged with recommending honorees for APA Geriatric Awards: the Jack Weinberg Award in Geriatric Psychiatry and Hartford-Jeste Award for Future Leaders in Geriatric Psychiatry. The Jack Weinberg Award recognizes psychiatrists who have made noteworthy contributions to geriatric psychiatry as researchers, mentors, leaders, and clinicians over the course of their careers. The 2016 award recipient was Dr. Constantine G. Lyketsos. The recently established Hartford Jeste Award recognizes an early-career geriatric psychiatrist who has made significant contributions to the field of geriatric psychiatry through excellence in research, teaching, clinical practice, and community service and has demonstrated the potential to develop into a future leader in the field. The 2016 awardee was Dr. Ilse Weichers.

The Council on Healthcare Systems and Financing (CHSF)

Harsh K. Trivedi, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Healthcare Systems and Financing continued its efforts to monitor and provide analysis for a number of significant issues that have an impact on the financing and delivery of, and access to, psychiatric care, including outreach to decision makers in the public and private sectors.
Mental health parity continues to be a prominent concern. Despite the passage of MHPAEA, the ACA provisions, and the recent CMS rule implementing parity in Medicaid managed plans, enforcement remains a critical issue. Meetings with the Department of Labor, which is charged with enforcing parity, continue and are generally focused on parity complaints, particularly complaints about network adequacy. Discussions with MCOs and state enforcement agencies, including several attorneys general, continue. APA has been engaging the White House’s Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Parity Task Force to provide expertise and guidance. As a result of this effort, APA coordinated a listening session held during the May 2016 Annual Meeting in Atlanta, which provided psychiatrists with an opportunity to voice concerns in person to the Task Force leadership.
The Council is also actively involved in ongoing analysis of the MACRA legislation and what it means for psychiatrists in terms of options for participation and feasibility of alternative payment methods. Educational resources, including a webinar, have been developed and will continue to be refined.
In addition, members have been collaborating with other medical professional associations on the development and recognition of CPT codes to describe the work of collaborative care, as well as ongoing work with Medicare to secure coverage for the interprofessional consultation codes, improvement for coverage of telepsychiatry, and increased recognition of cognitive work essential for appropriate clinical care. Largely through the efforts of the APA, CMS announced in the recently proposed rule on the 2017 Physician Fee Schedule a proposal to start paying for collaborative care services beginning in January 2017. APA will be providing comments in support of coverage and encouraging CMS to increase the proposed payment, which appears to be too low to sustain the model.
The presence of PBMs is not new, but the tremendous increase in micromanagement of pharmacy requests and the associated time burden is. The Council has been working to develop and implement a work plan to address the volume of complaints coming from members on various aspects of this issue.
The Committee on RBRVS, Codes, and Reimbursements, Gregory Harris, M.D., M.P.H., Chairperson, continues its work with the AMA CPT Editorial Panel and the AMA RVS Update Committee (RUC). Members of this committee were instrumental in the development of CPT codes describing collaborative care services that were approved by the AMA CPT Editorial Panel in February 2016. The committee will continue their advocacy efforts with the AMA RUC to ensure the CPT codes are properly valued. The committee members continued to provide one-on-one assistance to APA members on coding and documentation through the APA’s CPT Coding Network, which is maintained through the Practice Management HelpLine.
The Committee on Reimbursement for Psychiatric Care, Bruce Schwartz, M.D., Chairperson, continued to monitor the federally mandated Medicare prospective payment system (PPS) for inpatient and partial hospitalization psychiatric care. Key issues of concern include the expansion of performance-based approaches for the payment of treatment that are based on quality indicators. Ongoing liaison continues with key stakeholder organizations (e.g., the American Hospital Association, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission). The committee will be focusing more on issues related to alternative payment models in the coming year.
The Committee on Telepsychiatry, chaired by Jay Shore, M.D., transitioned from a workgroup into a committee in May 2016. Shortly thereafter, the Committee launched its Telepsychiatry Toolkit, which contains resources for members interested in adding telepsychiatry to their practice. The Workgroup on Integrated Care, chaired by Lori Raney, M.D., is continuing its leadership role within the APA and with other stakeholders in encouraging psychiatrists to become part of providing integrated patient-centered care. The workgroup, having completed their original work plan, will be turning their attention to the integration of primary care in the community mental health sector.
The Council has continued to implement the recommendations from the Ad Hoc Work Group on APA Health Care Reform. These include: establishing an advocacy and communications strategy supporting the value of psychiatry; designing a plan of action to define and advocating for sustainable integrated care payment models with CMS; defining quality measures for psychiatric care; influencing the national research agenda for behavioral health services and related sciences; levering the APA's position to stimulate advances in technology that will allow for the creation of EMRs and apps that better support the needs of psychiatrists; and developing a national strategy that highlights the role of psychiatrists in organized systems of care and included behavioral health and allied professionals.

The Council on International Psychiatry

Bernardo Ng, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on International Psychiatry is focused on generating opportunities to enhance education and training on global mental health and international psychiatry and developing strategies for international membership growth. Council members have expertise in international and cultural issues, including global mental health, and offer broad perspectives and representation of domestic and international psychiatry.

Education and Training

The Council continues to identify and support opportunities for the development of quality abstracts on global mental health and international topics for presentation at the APA Annual Meeting and other international psychiatric meetings. The Council coordinates efforts with national psychiatric organizations outside the United States and with U.S.-based psychiatric organizations for ethnic groups and international medical graduates, and through APA components such as the Caucus on Global Mental Health and Psychiatry.
Council and Caucus members developed and coordinated presentations focused on training American psychiatrists as global mental health investigators, implementers, and collaborators, as well as reviewing models of education and training on global mental health. The Council and Caucus will continue to expand on these topics and others, including migrant and cultural issues, for upcoming meetings.
The research colloquium for junior investigators held during the 2016 APA Annual Meeting in Atlanta featured the inaugural participation of young researchers from Brazil, Colombia, France, and Mexico. Additional slots are being reserved for international participation at the 2017 APA Annual Meeting in San Diego to foster greater participation. Participation in the international poster session and the scientific program continues to include hundreds of psychiatrists and trainees from over 50 countries. The Council and Caucus will continue to promote participation in these opportunities for professional growth by international psychiatrists.
The Council is also coordinating abstract submissions for relevant international meetings, including international congresses of the World Psychiatric Association and the upcoming 2017 World Congress of Psychiatry, which features the theme “Psychiatry of the 21st Century: Context, Controversies and Commitment.”

Membership and Engagement

The Council is connecting with U.S.-based ethnic group psychiatric organizations to identify opportunities for collaboration and foster closer relationships with the APA. The organizations contacted include the American Society of Hispanic Psychiatry, the Arab American Psychiatric Association, the Association of Chinese American Psychiatrists, the Association of Korean American Psychiatrists, the Haitian American Psychiatric Association, the Hellenic American Psychiatric Association, the Indo American Psychiatric Association, the Nigerian American Psychiatrists Association, the Philippine Psychiatrists in America, the Society of Iranian Psychiatrists in North America, the Turkish American Neuropsychiatric Association, and the Viet-American Mental Health Network.
A new membership category for psychiatric trainees outside of the U.S. and Canada was approved and finalized during the 2016 APA Annual Meeting. A membership category for international medical students is being reviewed and finalized. APA will connect and coordinate with psychiatric organizations outside the U.S. and Canada to share the benefits and opportunities associated with these new membership categories.

Policy and Recognition

The Council reviews APA position statements and Assembly action papers addressing a range of issues affecting psychiatry. Over the course of the past year, they have reviewed and provided updates and feedback on topics such as the abuse and misuse of psychiatry, human rights, and migrant and refugee mental health. The following are position statements (PS) and action papers (AP) reviewed and under review by the Council in coordination with several other APA components:
“Identification of Abuse and Misuse of Psychiatry” (PS)
“Abuse and Misuse of Psychiatry” (PS)
“Use of Psychiatric Institutions for the Commitment of Political Dissenters” (PS)
“Resolution Condemning the Role of Psychiatrist Radovan Karadzic in Human Rights Abuse in the Former Yugoslavia” (PS)
“Denial of Human Rights Abuses” (PS)
“Equality in Permanent Licensure Policy” (AP)
“A Psychiatric Response to Human Trafficking” (AP)
“Disapproval of the Detention of Central American Asylum Seeking Children and Families in Need of International Protection” (AP)
“Position Statement on Migrant and Refugee Crisis Around the World” (AP)
The Council nominated former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. David Satcher to receive the 2016 APA Human Rights Award in recognition of his efforts to promote and support the human rights of populations with mental health needs through the release of the first U.S. Surgeon General’s report addressing mental health, Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General, and his efforts to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities. Dr. Satcher was presented with the award by APA President Dr. Maria Oquendo during the 2016 APA Annual Meeting in Atlanta.
The Council continues to explore opportunities for global mental health education and training, opportunities to foster exchange and bilateral learning between American and international psychiatrists, identifying issues that affect international medical graduate psychiatrists in the United States, and addressing mental health care and treatment of diverse populations.

The Council on Medical Education and Lifelong Learning

Mark Hyman Rapaport, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Medical Education and Lifelong Learning monitors emerging issues and facilitates the development of resources and programs for psychiatric education at every level. It includes premedical education, medical education, and graduate medical education for residents and fellows in psychiatry (both basic education and subspecialty areas), psychiatric aspects of graduate medical education for other medical specialists, and postgraduate continuing medical education and lifelong learning. The Council advises and assists the APA Division of Education in the development of its education programs and initiatives. To facilitate collaboration and communication, the Council is a convening body for the allied psychiatry educational organizations, including the American Association of Directors of Residency Training, Association of Directors of Medical Student Education in Psychiatry, Association of Academic Psychiatrists, and American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology.
The Council firmly believes that the APA, as a professional association, values the highest standards of clinical practice and lifelong professional development. As psychiatric educators, the Council on Medical Education and Lifelong Learning believes that the APA has an obligation to support the lifelong learning of its members. The Council’s major initiatives and activities are as listed below.

Collaborative Care

The Council continued its initiative to advance education and training of psychiatrists for new roles in collaboration with primary care:
A summary of the Council report on integrated care was published in Academic Psychiatry. Summers RF. Integrated Behavioral Health Care and Psychiatric Training. August 2015, Volume 39, Issue 4, pp 425–429
The Council endorsed APA’s large-scale initiative to train 3,500 psychiatrists in the clinical and leadership skills needed to support collaborative care. The training is part of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Transforming Clinical Practice Initiative (TCPI). Online and live training opportunities are currently available to all psychiatrists and trainees. APA will train psychiatrists in collaboration with the AIMS (Advancing Innovative Mental Health Solutions) Center at the University of Washington through seven online modules and in-person trainings at the 2016 Annual Meeting in May and 2016 IPS Meeting in October.

Supporting Education and Training

An APA Education Summit was convened by the Council in Fall 2015: Focus on Faculty Development. The summit provided a forum for discussion of barriers to faculty development of the newer skills needed in a resource-limited environment. Allied education organizations reported on their faculty development activities. Discussion centered on issues of improving faculty content knowledge and pedagogic skill, recruiting faculty into teaching, and resources.
The Council is frequently called on to provide opinion on actions and issues related to education. The Council supported APA testimony to the Department of Veterans Affairs Commission on Care regarding the shortage of psychiatrists and the need to strengthen recruitment and training efforts. The Council reviewed recommended action steps in the 2015 Board of Trustees Workgroup on Training and Education Report. The Council weighed in regarding ABPN’s current requirement that individuals be required to maintain general certification in order to maintain subspecialty certification.

Graduate Medical Education (GME)

The Council monitored and provided comments on the following GME issues:
Should psychiatry residents have the option of using their PGY-4 year of training to also fulfill the requirements for ACGME accredited subspecialty fellowship training?
Partial hospital training in residency education.
Parity in licensure policy.
Strengthening the role of residency training to improve access to buprenorphine. The APA Division of Education has taken the following steps: 1) submitted a proposal to SAMHSA to update and fund APA’s online buprenorphine training. The online training is provided without charge to APA member residents; 2) reduced cost of buprenorphine training at the Annual Meeting and IPS; 3) added advanced buprenorphine sessions at the IPS to provide technical assistance to buprenorphine prescribers; and 4) submitted a renewal application of the PCSS-MAT program.
The Council provided input to ACGME on resident “duty hours.” In preparation for a complete review of its accreditation requirements, the ACGME sought comments on the impact of the ACGME’s current duty hour policy on education and clinical care; on implementation/reporting burden; recommendations regarding standards governing key aspects of the learning and working environment; and identification of specific concerns of our field that may be different from other specialties. In January 2016, the APA submitted a letter to the ACGME in response to a request for comments. The APA affirmed its commitment to working with the ACGME but stressed the importance of developing an evidence base that can inform future ACGME policy. The APA also advocated for standardization of requirements for residents in all years of training.

Lifelong Learning

The Council serves as consultant to the CME activities of APA and to the overall CME program. The Council is involved in shaping APA education, in assisting with needs assessment for CME activities, and in identifying psychiatrist knowledge gaps. At the request of the Board of Trustees, the Council provided input with regard to the Division of Education’s creation of a pilot program that would increase APA’s educational offerings by partnering with non-ACCME accredited district branches and affiliates to develop live and enduring education through joint sponsorship of CME credit. The program will be expanded to include provision of credit to live meetings of allied organizations and online education of district branches and allied psychiatric groups. The Joint Sponsorship Program expansion will provide added value to education initiatives affecting psychiatry and enhance professional reputations of district branches and APA affiliates.
With the financial support of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the Council on Addiction Psychiatry and the Council on Medical Education have been working to identify, evaluate, and make widely available open source resources for a curriculum on substance use disorders that can be used to guide and augment the didactics curriculum of general psychiatry residency training programs in accordance with ACGME program requirements.

 Education Awards

The Council approved the selection of APA’s education awards. The 2016 Vestermark Psychiatry Educator Award recognizes excellence, leadership, and creativity in the field of psychiatric education. The winners are John Howard Coverdale, M.D., and Robert E. Hales, M.D., M.B.A. The Council approved nominations for the Irma Bland Award for Excellence in Teaching Residents and The Nancy C.A. Roeske, M.D., Certificate of Excellence in Medical Student Education.

The Council on Minority Mental Health and Health Disparities

Christina Mangurian, M.D., M.A.S., Chairperson
The Council has the responsibility for the representation of and advocacy for both minority and underserved populations and psychiatrists from minority and underrepresented groups. The Council aims to increase awareness and understanding of cultural diversity and to foster the development of attitudes, knowledge, and skills in the areas of cultural competence through consultation, education, and advocacy within both the APA and the field of psychiatry and public policy. The Council aims to promote the recruitment into the profession and into the APA and retention/leadership development of psychiatrists from minority and underrepresented groups both within the profession and in the APA. The Council seeks to reduce mental health disparities in clinical services and research, which disproportionately affect women and minority populations.
In 2016:
Council members presented 12 scientific sessions at the May 2016 APA Annual Meeting on varying topics related to minority mental health and health disparities, including a session by current and former APA/APAF Fellow Council members entitled, Standing Up to Violence in Police Encounters: The Players, the Victims, the Trauma, and the Solutions (Jared Taylor, M.D., Matthew Dominguez, M.D., Jessica Moore, M.D., Raquel Reid, M.D., Elie Aoun, M.D.). Additionally, four of the seven award lectures under the Council’s purview also occurred at the Annual Meeting:
Simon Bolivar Award Lecture by Gabriel De Erausquin, M.D., Ph.D., on “The Person in Personalized Medicine: Lessons from the IMAGES Study”;
Solomon Carter Fuller Lecture by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Ph.D., “The Sweet Enchantment of Post-Racial Racism in America”;
George Tarjan Award Lecture by Emmanuel Cassimatis, M.D., on “Regulating the Entry of International Medical Graduates into U.S. Medicine and Psychiatry and Endeavoring to Contribute to Their Professional Development: The Role of the ECFMG”;
Oskar Pfister Award Lecture by James Lomax, M.D., on “Seeking the Sacred in Psychotherapy and in Life”;
The Kun-Po Soo Award will be presented to Geetha Jayaram M.D., and the Alexandra Symonds Award will be presented to Annelle Primm, M.D., during IPS in October 2016.
The Council reviewed 13 APA position statements to ensure they were all updated to include a more comprehensive list of cultural identity variables consistent with current understanding of cultural identity in DSM-5. Position statements were reviewed on abortion, affirmative action, discrimination against IMGs, discrimination against persons with previous psychiatric treatment, diversity, domestic violence, domestic violence against women, don’t ask don’t tell, prevention of violence, psychiatrists from M/UR groups in leadership roles, religious persecution, resolution against racism, and resolution opposing restriction on the number of IMGs entering graduate medical training. The Council approved a motion to revise three position statements on abortion, affirmative action, and religious persecution.
In May, the Council welcomed Helena Hansen, M.D., as the incoming vice chairperson and expressed appreciation to departing members Nyapati Rao, M.D., Jose Vito, M.D., and consultant Sandy Walker, M.D. The Council also formally welcomed Brandon Batiste, M.P.H., as the new Deputy Director of the APA Division of Diversity and Health Equity (DDHE). The Council will continue its long and fruitful partnership with DDHE and looks forward to upcoming collaborations with Dr. Parekh, Director of DDHE and team on a number of new initiatives under her direction. These include the creation of a mentoring program for APA/APAF fellows, a training program on cultural sensitivity for APA members, and continued Conversations about Diversity and Health Equity with APA Members, the third of which was held at the 2016 APA Annual Meeting facilitated by Marc Nivet, Ed.D., Chief Diversity Officer at the Association of American Medical Colleges.
Also at its May meeting, Council members bid farewell to outgoing resident fellows assigned to the Council from the various APA/APAF fellowship programs. These residents were acknowledged for their active support and participation in Council deliberations and projects.
In June 2016, Council member Enrico Castillo, M.D., and Ranna Parekh, M.D., Ph.D., represented the APA at the follow-up event of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Forum. The American Psychiatric Association, General Motors, and the Ohio State University organized a June 20–21, 2016 summit at the APA headquarters in Rosslyn, Virginia and Hall of the States in Washington, DC. The summit brought together leadership from academic, corporate, philanthropic/service, and governmental organizations to a) identify the most promising practices for training in inclusive excellence, b) build coalitions across sectors to advance best practices for inclusive excellence training, and c) develop appropriate metrics to measure the impact of diversity and inclusion program efforts.
In recent years, the U.S. has witnessed violence and racial tensions between minority communities, and at times the police officers employed to protect. The Council is turning its attention to this phenomenon’s effect on the mental well-being of minority communities and society at large. The Council has done some of this work through workshops and position statements outlined above. The Council will focus on this topic in the upcoming year to identify tangible ways to work together to improve the mental health of all populations subjected to this violence and racism.

The Council on Psychiatry and the Law

Steven Kenny Hoge, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Psychiatry and the Law has continued its work evaluating legal developments of national significance, proposed legislation, regulations, and other government intervention that affect the practice of psychiatry, including the subspecialty of forensic psychiatry. The Council focuses on legislation, regulation, and case law that has the potential to influence the provision, quality, or availability of mental health care and services, alter the psychiatrist-patient relationship, affect confidentiality or the rights of patients, or that will otherwise regulate the practice of psychiatry in the public or private sector.
At the September 2015 Components meeting, the Council on Psychiatry and the Law had a joint meeting with the Committee on Judicial Action on “Physician Assistance with Dying.” Members from the Council on Geriatric Psychiatry and the APA Ethics Committee also attended the meeting. Dr. Dan Larriviere, a neurologist, presented on ethical and legal issues; Dr. Linda Ganzini discussed the Oregon’s Death with Dignity Act; Dr. Bob Roca reviewed the decisional capacity; and Dr. Joanne Lynn ended the meeting with some discussion on the view from geriatrics. The group had a lively discussion, which led to the Council forming a workgroup. The workgroup is currently in the process of meeting, and the ultimate plan is to create a resource document. At the upcoming 2016 September Components meeting, the Council on Psychiatry and the Law and the Committee on Judicial Action will be hosting a joint meeting on Physician Health Programs. The Council on Addictions has been invited to attend.
This past year, the Council on Psychiatry and the Law has worked on a number of items. The Council developed a position statement and resource document on involuntary outpatient commitment. A position paper and resource document were developed on college and mental health, in addition to a position statement on trial and sentencing of juveniles in the criminal justice system. The documents have all been approved and can be found on www.psychiatry.org. The Council wrote a proposed position paper on Location of Civil Commitment, which is currently in the governance process to be reviewed by the Assembly and then the Board of Trustees. Currently, the Council is working on a wide array of subjects, including firearms in hospitals, solitary confinement, and research of involuntary patients, to name a few.
The Committee on Judicial Action, a component of the Council on Psychiatry and the Law, has overseen APA consideration of involvement as a friend of the court in many cases at every level of the judicial system. The committee continues to review cases and to recommend to the APA Board of Trustees APA involvement in a number of cases that cover a range of topics. In addition, the committee works with district branches to provide guidance and input and in some cases recommends financial support for amicus briefs held at the state level. The Isaac Ray Committee and the Manfred S. Guttmacher Award Committee also reports to the Council on Psychiatry and the Law. Both committees have met over the summer to select a recipient for the 2017 awards.

The Council on Psychosomatic Medicine

David Gitlin, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Psychosomatic Medicine (CPM) focuses on the psychiatric care of persons who are medically ill and/or pregnant and works at the interface of psychiatry with all other medical, obstetrical, and surgical specialties. It recognizes that integration of biopsychosocial care is vital to the well-being and healing of patients and that full membership in the house of medicine is essential for our profession.
For decades, psychosomatic medicine (also known as consultation-liaison psychiatry) has been at the forefront of treating patients with comorbid psychiatric and physical conditions. As more psychiatrists become involved with consultation-liaison psychiatry through the integration of physical and mental health care, psychosomatic medicine can provide valuable insight and expertise.
In May, APA and the Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine (APM) jointly released the Council report, Dissemination of Integrated Care within Adult Primary Care Settings: the Collaborative Care Model. The report has been used to educate policymakers, providers, and advocates about collaborative care and advance the use of the model. The report was mentioned during a congressional briefing the APA hosted on the collaborative care model and also distributed through APA’s media and social media channels, as well as highlighted on APA Television during the Annual Meeting. The Council is currently working to summarize the report for publication in peer-reviewed journals and identifying ways to highlight the report’s content on the APA website and provide additional resources for members, such as how to work with primary care doctors.
The Council also provides timely feedback on key priorities for APA by providing input on regulatory comments, such as the proposed rule for the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule for Calendar Year 2017 and Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA). Council members also submitted comments on draft guidelines and policy documents for other medical societies.
On an ongoing basis, members of the Council provide their expertise for media interviews and other initiatives. This includes:
Speaking with the Psychiatric Times and Psychiatric News about depression-diabetes. Specifically, speaking with Psychiatric Times about improving outcomes for depression and diabetes through the collaborative care model and sharing expertise with Psychiatric News about evidence linking antidepressants with glycemic control and how best to treat patients with these comorbidities.
Speaking with Psychiatric News about the need to balance effective pain management with awareness of risk associated with opiate use.
Participating on behalf of APA in a project being led by the Duke Evidence-Based Practice Center (EPC) working with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to provide expert feedback on a systematic review on Postmyocardial Infarction Depression.
The Council also developed and had the following documents approved as official APA documents:
Position Statement on “Emergency Department Boarding of Individuals with Psychiatric Disorders”;
Position Statement on “Recognition and Management of HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Impairment and Disorders (HAND)”;
Position Statement on “Screening and Testing for HIV Infection”; and
Resource Document on “Bariatric Surgery and Psychiatric Care.”
In addition to completing the above documents, the Council plans to expand on the position statement on “Emergency Department Boarding of Individuals with Psychiatric Disorders” by developing a resource document focused on timely access to psychiatric emergency services. The Council is also working in partnership with the Council on Geriatric Psychiatry to develop a position statement on “Palliative Care and Psychiatry.” Finally, a workgroup is in the process of being formed to develop a resource document on QTc prolongation and psychiatric disorders.
Lastly, the Council’s early-career psychiatry members initiated an educational project to share their enthusiasm for the field with medical students and psychiatric residents. This project has expanded to include a broader workgroup of the Council along with APA member experts in media who are creating a series of Prezi videos (presentation software that can be used as a storytelling tool) to explain what psychosomatic medicine means, the range of practice settings for consult psychiatrists, and how to get involved in training programs. The video will be housed on the APA’s website and shared through its relevant list serves, media channels, and relationships with medical schools.

The Council on Quality Care

Grayson Norquist, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Quality Care monitors developments and carries out activities to ensure the highest standards of care remain integral parts of the APA mission. This includes, but is not limited to, participating in initiatives and disseminating information in the following areas: clinical practice guidelines; quality and performance indicators; development and implementation of patient registries; standards and survey procedures; mental health information technology; and patient safety. The Council collaborates with other groups within the APA governance structure to respond to topics of mutual concern, such as patient outcome measures and the effects of quality improvement efforts on patient populations and clinical practice.

Strategic Discussion on an APA-Supported Registry

The Councils on Research, Quality Care, and Healthcare Systems and Financing continued their strategic discussions with the APA Board of Trustees (BOT) on an APA-supported registry during the July 2015, December 2015, and March 2016 BOT meetings. Stemming from the Council-charged workgroup formalized in May 2014, the work presented included a report of recommendations outlining how the APA should move forward with an APA-supported registry (July 2015). As a result of this presentation, the BOT requested the workgroup outline business cases or scenarios in which a mental health registry would be most beneficial to psychiatrists and their patients. In a follow-up presentation during the December 2015 BOT meeting, the workgroup presented potential options for registries the APA might support. Following the business case report, the Board of Trustees requested the development of a formal business plan. During the March 2016 BOT meeting, it was voted to approve funding for a 2-year pilot program of an APA-supported mental health registry. Dr. Greg Dalack, Chair of the Registry Workgroup and a member of the Council on Quality Care, presented at all three of these meetings.

Steering Committee on Practice Guidelines

The Committee continues to focus on developing evidence-based practice guidelines to assist psychiatrists in clinical decision making. The newest guideline, Practice Guideline on the Use of Antipsychotics to Treat Agitation or Psychosis in Patients with Dementia, was approved by the APA Board of Trustees in December 2015 and was published in May 2016. This and other guidelines are available for free on psychiatryonline.org: http://psychiatryonline.org/guidelines. Other dementia guideline-related products that will be available soon include an executive summary in the American Journal of Psychiatry, articles in Psychiatric News and Psychopharmacology Update, a CME vignette, family/care provider information, and teaching slides.
The Guideline Writing Group is currently working on a guideline that will address the pharmacological treatment of alcohol use disorder. Following the completion of this guideline, the group will then begin work on a new guideline for treatment of bipolar disorder based on an AHRQ systematic review that should be completed in December 2016.
A second writing group, chaired by Dr. Linda Worley, was formed and is working on a new guideline for treatment of eating disorders. Once the work on this guideline is complete, the group will begin work on a guideline for treatment of delirium following an in-house systematic review on the topic.
A third writing group is also being formed to work on a new guideline for treatment of people with schizophrenia. This guideline will be based on an AHRQ systematic review on the topic that is expected to be available in January 2017.
An update to the 2010 Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients with Major Depressive Disorder is currently in progress and should be completed by the end of 2016.

Committee on Mental Health Information Technology

The Committee on Mental Health Information Technology (CMHIT) continued work on a number of topics, such as technical data standards, health information exchanges, and telemedicine. The group convenes monthly by conference call to oversee its various activities. This year the group responded to a call for public comment on the 2016 proposed rule for the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), specifically providing feedback on the Advancing Care Information (ACI) quality reporting category of the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS). For several months, the group explored the feasibility of developing an EHR comparison database tool to be hosted by the APA on psychiatry.org, including providing project-level details for moving forward. After careful consideration of APA’s current membership needs and other factors, the JRC decided against moving forward with this project.
Within the CMHIT, the Apps Workgroup has developed a process for reviewing behavioral and mental health applications (“apps”) and is working with the APA Administration to develop a website that will host product reviews of these apps.
In addition, CMHIT and the APA Administration have developed a frequently asked questions (FAQs) resource to be available on psychiatry.org for members. The FAQs include questions commonly submitted to APA through e-mail or fielded through the Practice Management Help Line or the Customer Service line. The FAQs will be available on the Practice Management section of psychiatry.org and are intended to be updated frequently, with new questions and answers being added to the document quarterly based on what is submitted to APA staff.

Quality Improvement and Quality Measurement

The Council discussed issues and priorities facing the Association with regard to performance measure development and implementation, as well as providing education to members about these increasingly important topics. Included in these topics are: MACRA [Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act] and its associated Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) proposed rule. The Council acknowledged APA collaborations with other entities through national initiatives such as the AMA-supported Physician Consortium for Performance Improvement (PCPI) and considers measure concepts internally through the practice guideline development process. Pressure is building for psychiatry to define quality measures for the diagnosis and treatment of mental health and substance use disorders, as the entire health care system is moving toward a pay-for-quality approach. It is critical for the APA to be involved in defining these quality measures, otherwise crucial measures pertaining to psychiatry will be defined by payers, other groups of clinicians (particularly psychology), as well as patient advocates. There are different approaches to measure development such as developing focused measures on specific psychiatric disorders versus measures that are global to psychiatry (e.g., psychiatric evaluation) or to all of health care (e.g., care coordination, medication reconciliation). In support of this effort, the BOT approved a proposal to develop a Committee on Performance Measurement. This Committee held its inaugural teleconference in August 2015 and identified two goals to focus its efforts: 1) publication of a white paper that outlines the APA’s position on performance measure development and the organization’s place within the National Quality Enterprise, and 2) completion of a systematic performance measurement gap review. Both of these projects will position the APA to become a major voice in how psychiatrists are reimbursed by the public and (eventually) private payers.

Reporting Workgroups

Several other workgroups developed under the Council are active or have received approval to continue to convene. The Patient Safety Workgroup focuses on a variety of patient safety issues such as transitions of care that occur when patients are discharged from inpatient care. The Standards and Survey Procedures Workgroup continues to address policies related to institutional surveys, as well as development of standards in collaboration with national organizations (e.g., the Joint Commission). The Gender Dysphoria Workgroup’s commission has been extended and plans to continue developing resource documents focusing on treatment of those with gender dysphoria. Most recently, a resource document entitled “Assessment and Treatment of Gender Dysphoria and Gender Variant Patients: A Primer for Psychiatrists” was approved by the BOT. The next step will be to gain approval for publication in the American Journal of Psychiatry of a condensed version of this resource document. The third meeting of the Caucus on Psychotherapy occurred at the APA Annual Meeting in May 2016, with a growing membership of 174 APA members who have interest in this area. This group convenes psychiatrists interested in advancing psychotherapy and psychosocial treatment.

The Council on Research

Dwight Evans, M.D., Chairperson
The Council on Research carries out activities to ensure that the substance and significance of research on mental health remain integral parts of the APA mission and in the forefront of the national health agenda. The Council embodies the Association’s commitment to advance psychiatric knowledge through the conduct of research by physician scientists across a broad range of research fields and issues: basic science, clinical diagnosis and assessment, treatment research, epidemiology, health services, prevention research, and research training. These areas are represented by the committees and task forces under the Council’s jurisdiction. The following is a brief report of the May 2016 meeting of the Council on Research and its future plans.

APA Registry Discussion

The APA Patient Registry Work Group drafted and presented a report summarizing their activities and discussions. The APA approved moving forward with registry development and selected FIGmd as the vendor to assist in its creation. FIGmd has a great deal of experience in registry development and extracting data from existing electronic health records (EHR).
The registry will serve a number of significant purposes and is anticipated to help clinicians in several important ways. Among these is its ability to enable psychiatrists to easily meet quality care reporting requirements imposed by the Affordable Care Act, such as those involving submission of quality care reports to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS). Failure to report on quality care will result in reimbursement payment penalties, and participation in the registry will allow psychiatrists to avoid these deductions. The registry also will assist with psychiatrists’ submissions of Maintenance of Certification Part 4 requirements and will result in a large research database that could be used to conduct studies, as well as for benchmarking purposes.
The APA’s registry team is working closely with FIGmd to determine how to use existing EHRs to fulfill PQRS reporting requirements in order to help psychiatrists avoid potential penalties imposed by CMS, if a significant number of quality measures are met. The registry could also potentially qualify psychiatrists to achieve CMS’ high performer bonus. During the Council’s gathering at the APA’s 2016 Annual Meeting, the Council endorsed the process of moving forward with the registry and recommended that the Division of Research work with the Council and any stakeholders to further refine the final content.

APA Responded to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Proposed Reclassification of ECT

The FDA proposed that ECT devices be reclassified from class III to class II and that some specific warnings should apply to ECT devices. With this reclassification, ECT devices could continue to be used to treat severe depression in adults who require a rapid treatment response or who are not responding to other therapies. However, the FDA proposed that additional clinical research studies would be needed before using ECT to treat other conditions, including manic episodes (in bipolar disorder), schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or catatonia. The FDA also proposed that the use of ECT devices in children and adolescents up to age 17 years would not be approved without further research. Finally, the FDA proposed that patients be given a number of warnings about ECT, including a warning that continuation and maintenance ECT have not been shown to be effective. Under the proposal, it was not clear what would happen to patients who are receiving ECT if the regulations were to go into effect.
Council on Research ECT experts and a group of about 30 global ECT experts came together and held multiple conference calls to prepare a response, which was sent by the APA to provide guidance to the FDA on this proposed rule, including data to support the use of ECT in conditions other than depression and the use of ECT for maintenance therapy.

Component Updates

Committee on Research Training.

The Council’s Committee on Research Training met separately at the Annual Meeting to discuss the outcome of the Research Colloquium, as well as plans for the 2017 Colloquium. The 2016 Colloquium took place Sunday, May 15, from 8:00 a.m.–5:30 p.m. The Colloquium received funding support from the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ACNP) and Society of Biological Psychiatry (SOBP). Representatives from APA, ACNP, and SOBP spoke during the morning session. Several excellent mentors took part in the event, including Drs. Linda Carpenter and Carolyn Rodriguez from the Council on Research, and Dr. Diana Clarke, APA’s Research Statistician. As part of a pilot project led by Dr. Maria Oquendo, APA’s President, five international mentees from Mexico (one), Columbia (two), Brazil (one), and France (one) also took part. The international mentees were selected and sponsored by their country’s psychiatric association or branch of the Society of Biological Psychiatry.
Provided that funding can be obtained, 15 international young investigators will be invited to take part next year. The work group also hopes to bring in a panel of research statisticians to serve as mentors, as their perspectives are helpful and often unavailable to young researchers.

Research awards.

Dr. Carol Tamminga is being awarded the 2016 APA Award for Research. Dr. Tamminga will be presenting her lecture at the upcoming IPS (the Mental Health Services Conference) meeting in October, with a focus on describing how biomarkers in schizophrenia (and emerging biomarkers in general) can be incorporated into clinical practice.
Dr. Nancy Andreasen is being awarded the 2016 APA/American Association of Chairs of Departments of Psychiatry Research Mentorship Award. This was presented at the Early-Career Research Breakfast during the Annual Meeting. Although Dr. Andreasen was not available to accept the award in person, it was received in her honor by her Department Chairperson and a member of the Council on Research, Dr. James Potash, during the breakfast.

Committee on Psychiatric Dimensions of Disasters.

In January 2016, the Committee on Psychiatric Dimensions of Disasters (CPDD) was charged by the Joint Reference Committee (JRC) to develop a position statement on the psychiatric impact of climate change. This charge stemmed from an action paper passed at the May 2015 Assembly entitled “The Impact of Global Climate Change on Mental Health.” The CPDD met with the authors of the action paper and APA members with interest and expertise in the subject during a March 2016 conference call and again during the APA Annual Meeting in May to finalize a draft position statement and resource document, which was presented to the Council on Research. It will now be sent to the JRC for approval.
The group is also in the process of creating a workshop regarding how to respond to “active shooters.” There are three elements that take place during an active shooting that are challenging to clinicians and that the workshop aims to address: 1) evacuation (group versus individual); 2) leaving any patients who happen to be with the clinician in order to address the event; and 3) attempting to disarm or deactivate the shooter. The Council expressed positive feedback regarding plans for such a workshop.

Diagnostic Markers and Treatment Workgroup.

A meta-analysis of the literature on ketamine use was published in the American Journal of Psychiatry. The workgroup also asked for a treatment advisory, which has been written and approved by the council and will now be sent to the JRC for approval. They hope to publish this in the Journal of the American Medical Association or the New England Journal of Medicine. This will ensure a broad reach to all of medicine, rather than limiting it to a psychiatric audience, as prescribing of ketamine is often done by nonpsychiatrists.
Council members also worked as liaisons to the Caucus on Complementary and Alternative Medicine to produce a paper on S-adenosylmethionine. It was submitted to the American Journal of Psychiatry but was rejected. It will now be submitted to the American Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.
The workgroup is working on a paper on bipolar disorder and also plans to generate a paper on genetic predictors to treatment response in depression.
There is interest in a position statement on the use of medical marijuana for the treatment of various psychiatric disorders. The Council on Research is communicating with the Council on Addiction to see if their group is already working on such a statement and if so, whether the work group can be of any assistance.

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Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 1050 - 1064
PubMed: 27690559

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Published online: 1 October 2016
Published in print: October 01, 2016

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