1)
Overall clinical services are provided by 4 multidisciplinary general
psychiatry teams which treat the whole range of psychiatric disorders
on an inpatient and outpatient basis, in strict application of the
continuity of care philosophy. Each team is comprised of between
8-10 healthcare providers, a group that includes psychiatrists,
psychologists, CNS, LCSW, Chaplain, RN's and two Addiction Specialists
(either CARN or NCAC). Each team is assigned a cohort of patients
(approximately 1200 per team) of whose integral care the team is
responsible at all times.
2)
The inpatient psychiatric unit has 40 beds consisting of 12 beds
in the Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) for patients who have
been just admitted or whose clinical condition requires special
observation and surveillance, 4-6 detoxification beds depending
upon need, and 24 beds for general psychiatry patients. The Service
can also use two observation beds for 23-hour stays.
3)
The Outpatient Mental Health Clinic is also structured following
the team distribution outlined above. Each team has multi-disciplinary
staff seeing assigned patients (new or follow up cases) everyday.
There are at least 2-4 staff members (case managers and MDs) scheduled
in the Mental Health Clinic (MHC) on a daily basis. Other clinical
activities in the outpatient clinic include group therapy, depot-neuroleptics
clinic, anger management groups, and additional patient educational
activities.
4)
The following special programs are also cardinal components of the
MHSL:
a.
A multidisciplinary Substance Abuse Treatment Program (SATP) which
provides inpatient detoxification treatment, aftercare and evening
treatment (the latter provided to veterans who work during the
day), Halfway House funding for veterans who may be homeless,
and outreach measures. The SATP provides treatment based on level
of intensity required.
b.
Intensive Case Management Program (ICM) (formerly known as Intensive
Psychiatric Community Care Program) provides intensive care to
up to 53 veterans meeting specific criteria (hospitalizations
of 30 or more days a year in the past, diagnosis of schizophrenia
or other severe, chronic psychoses). The ICM Program has a staff
of a psychiatrist, full-time Clinical Social Worker, Social Work
Associate, Clinical Nurse Specialist and Licensed Practical Nurse,
as well as one full-time clerk. The ICM approach allows the continuous
insertion of veterans in the community, and is a very effective
means to prevent long-term institutional/residential care.
c.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Clinical Team (PCT) provides specialized
and intensive treatment to PTSD patients. Its staff comprises
full-time personnel that include a psychiatrist, psychologist,
a clinical Social Worker and a clerk. Treatment approaches range
from intensive two days a week, three-hours a day for four months,
to once a week group therapy sessions for patients grouped in
cohorts of no more than 16 individuals. The program, in operation
since 1995, serves veterans from World War II, Vietnam war, and
the Persian Gulf Conflict.
d.
Consultation/Behavioral Health Team (CBH) provides specialized
treatment in areas such as smoking cessation and sexual dysfunction;
at the same time it provides consultation services to evaluate
and treat patients in other services of the Medical Center who
may present psychiatric problems.
e.
Mental Health/Primary Care Clinic (Platinum Team), established
to attend the medical and physical problems of MHSL unique in
a comprehensive context. The Platinum Team is currently composed
of two internists, one pharmacist, one Nurse Practitioner, two
Registered Nurses and one clerk.
f.
Mental Health Care in Community Based Outpatient Clinics (CBOC's).
Mental Health services are currently provided at two CBOCs with
a Social Worker and a Psychiatrist in each site.
g.
The acquisition of a state-of-the art Electroconvulsive Therapy
(ECT) equipment will guarantee the availability of this procedure
to patients in need. An experienced group of MHSL staff psychiatrists
(with assistance of the VAMC’s Anesthesiology Division)
administers the treatment.
h.
The Therapeutic Recreational Activities (TRA) program provides
recreational activities and lunch to our chronically mentally
ill veterans for four hours per day, five days a week and assists
them in conducting socialization skills, leisure events, and structured
activities within a mental health clinic milieu.
5)
The research portfolio of the Atlanta VAMC MHSL includes:
a.
The use of a novel technology, Virtual Reality, has been utilized
for the management of PTSD. This has been expanded into chronic
pain studies. Pilot studies and pertinent publications are completed.
A large grant proposal with a number of neurobiological and neuropsychological
correlates for PTSD and Virtual Reality are is in the planning stage.
b.
Substance abuse research is rapidly expanding with a recent award
of a grant from the Drug Abuse Scholars Program in Psychiatry, a
collaboration between NIDA and the APA, to a SATP staff psychiatrist
(Karen Drexler, MD) in our service for the study of neuroimaging
of emotion and impulsivity in cocaine abuse
c.
The Pharmaceutical trials program based at the VAMC will likely
expand.
d.
The paradigm of startle response in schizophrenic patients has been
set up by Erica Duncan, MD. She recently has been funded with a
VA merit award to support this research.
e.
The Homeless research program including scrutiny of clinical diagnosis,
social support, medical complications and impact of several management
modalities.