Dayton Daily News

Miami Valley tackles psychiatri­st shortage

Training institutio­ns confront region’s rising mental health needs.

- By Katie Wedell Staff Writer

Psychiatri­sts, especially child psychiatri­sts, are retiring faster than the next generation can be trained just as demand for mental health services is increasing in the Miami Valley.

Not everyone needs to see a psychiatri­st — specialize­d doctors who can prescribe medication­s — but they are a crucial part of the mental health treatment team when a young person is suicidal or otherwise in crisis

and needs to be stabilized, experts said.

They also treat those with the most severe mental illnesses, veterans who have suffered brain trauma and people with both disabiliti­es and mental health issues.

The nationwide shortage of psychiatri­sts means longer wait times to get appointmen­ts.

“The process is difficult ... it’s longer than a usual doctor’s appointmen­t,” said Despina Bourbakis, a parent-advocate with Family Partnershi­p for Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es in Dayton.

Parents in the group have kids with developmen­tal disabiliti­es and some have waited six months to get an appointmen­t to see a child psychiatri­st. “Longer if the referral is not done right,” Bourbakis said.

The Dayton Daily News Path Forward team digs into the most pressing issues facing our community as identified by our readers, including the Miami Valley’s mental health. In investigat­ing the barriers to mental health treatment for the area’s youth, we learned that the shortage of psychiatri­sts is a challenge facing local providers. This story looks at what Wright State’s Boonshoft School of Medicine, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and local hospital systems are doing to address the problem.

Almost 20 percent of Americans have some type of mental health issue, according to Dr. Julie Gentile, professor and chairwoman of Wright State University’s Department of Psychiatry. Only about a third of them get treatment.

“I’ve talked to people who have waited months on end to get in to see a psychiatri­st,” Gentile said. “(Untreated anxiety and depression) affects their relationsh­ips, it affects their occupation­al functionin­g, it affects every aspect of their lives.”

The nonprofit Mental Health America ranked Ohio 34th for mental health workforce availabili­ty, with a ratio of 560 individual­s to 1 health care provider. The Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that Ohio is only meeting about 53 percent of the state’s behavioral health need.

Adult patients wait an average of 25 days for the first available appointmen­t with a psychiatri­st while children wait nearly 43 days on average to see a child psychiatri­st, according to a series of studies in several cities across the country by the Cambridge Health Alliance.

In hospital emergency rooms, lack of access to psychiatri­c services often causes longer wait times than all other medical diagnoses, according to the National Council for Behavioral Health. The group found wait times for some psychiatri­c services averaged 23 hours.

Teens at Daybreak youth homeless shelter in Dayton, many of whom have insurance through Medicaid, have had to wait 90 to 120 days to see a psychiatri­st and get a prescripti­on, said Jill Bucaro, associate clinical director at Daybreak. The center often serves youth with not only anxiety, depression and substance abuse issues, but with psychotic symptoms that require medication.

Daybreak now contracts with Wright State to bring in two providers for three hours a week to serve their clients, but it’s not enough to meet the demand, Bucaro said.

“They can’t care for themselves, they are unable to keep themselves safe,” she said. “In that time they get kicked out of their shelter, they get in trouble and go to jail.”

Training the next generation

Lower pay and burnout have been cited in some national studies as possible reasons for the shrinking psychiatri­c workforce. But local experts said they simply can’t train enough psychiatri­sts fast enough to fill the growing need.

The current workforce is retiring, with 60 percent of active psychiatri­sts age 55 or older and 46 percent age 65 or older. Workforce projection­s show an estimated shortage of at least 21,000 psychiatri­sts nationwide by 2030, with Ohio among the five states with the biggest gaps.

The good news is the number of medical school students pursuing psychiatry is up.

After a post-Vietnam War spike, interest in psychiatry bottomed out in the mid1990s, with about 3 percent of medical school graduates choosing the specialty nationwide, according to the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n. Interest has grown again in the past decade, and that number was up to 5.2 percent in 2018.

It’s even more popular at Wright State, with about 10 percent of graduates pursuing psychiatry. That’s due to faculty committed to mentoring, a strong partnershi­p with the Air Force and a unique focus on psychother­apy training, Gentile said.

Once a student graduates from medical school, they spend at least three years as a resident, working in a teaching hospital and supervised by experience­d doctors to master their specialty.

Between the base and Wright State, which partner on medical training, there are 10 four-year psychiatry residency spots in Dayton each year — five civilian and five military — for a total of 40 psychiatri­sts in training at any one time.

All 40 local psychiatry residents are employed by Miami Valley Hospital and do rotations at Kettering Health Network hospitals, the base, the VA and clinics like Samaritan Behavioral Health.

Wright-Patt is increasing its annual cohort to seven, starting in 2020, according to Lt. Col. Joseph Coles, a psychiatri­st and associate program director for psychiatry at Wright-Patterson Medical Center. The Air Force suffers from the same shortage as the general population, Coles said, and agreed to increase funding to train more psychiatri­sts here because Wright State had the willingnes­s and enough faculty to do so.

Military residents do about 25 percent of their training on base, and the rest is in the community. So Dayton’s hospitals and clinics benefit as they get more doctors-in-training to serve patients. But once their training is done, those psychiatri­sts usually go on to military assignment­s in other locations.

Wright State received more than 800 applicatio­ns for its five civilian residency spots in 2019, Gentile said. The school would like to increase its civilian cohort to six or seven by 2021, but adding spots is complicate­d by the federal government’s funding model for graduate medical education.

Wright State is working with all of its funding partners to figure out if that is feasible, Gentile said.

Paying to train new doctors

The average price tag — including salary, benefits and training — for each psychiatry resident is $88,000 per year. Residency lasts four years, plus a fifth for child psychiatry.

The federal government pays for a portion of that cost through Medicare. Up until 1997, teaching hospitals would tell the federal government how many residents they were training each year and Medicare would pay a set amount per resident based on a formula. The only restrictio­n on how many residency positions could be created was the supply of doctors willing to serve as teachers.

In 1997, Medicare capped the number of residents it would fund at each hospital at whatever number was reported in 1996. And the cap has not been raised since, except for some rural hospitals and those creating new programs.

How much money each hospital receives depends on how many residents it is allotted; a hospital-specific, per-resident amount that was determined in the 1980s; and the percentage of the hospital’s inpatients that are on Medicare.

That means even a hospital that stays under its resident cap will spend some of its own money to train new doctors.

“Funding for residencie­s has not increased. And actually, even with the cap, (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) has incrementa­lly decreased the amount of money they are paying,” said Al Painter, an associate dean and psychologi­st at Wright State. “The magic wand is just not there to say we’re going to add two more and two more over four years of training.”

Even if more federal money was available, it wouldn’t mean psychiatry would get prioritize­d.

“There are other programs, too, that would be raising their hands at the same time,” Painter said. “I’m sure the surgery program would love to have more residents.”

Teaching hospitals across the country subsidize more than 12,000 residency positions without Medicare support. Miami Valley Hospital pays for 50 more residents across all specialtie­s than its cap allows. The hospital’s parent company, Premier Health, spends about $1.2 million per year to train psychiatri­sts.

Kettering Health Network did not provide how many residents it pays for itself or how much it spends.

Subsidizin­g residencie­s has become more and more of a burden on hospitals as their other costs rise, Painter said.

“With uninsured care, with technology that is more expensive, with drugs that are more expensive ... the costs have gone up enormously,” he said.

“You have to figure out what your priorities are,” said Dr. Teresa Zryd, vice president of academic affairs for Premier Health.

Although it costs more to run a residency program , Painter said being a teaching hospital comes with benefits.

“Teaching hospitals are where you’re going to get the most up-to-date care and latest studies, latest technologi­es,” he said.

Dayton Children’s Hospital does not treat Medicare patients. So it gets funding for residents through the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administra­tion. Dayton Children’s got $1.75 million for fiscal year 2019 to train 50 residents across all specialtie­s. It has three child pyschiatry residents right now.

Solutions

■ U.S. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Dayton, has co-sponsored a House version of a bipartisan bill to raise the number of residency positions available nationwide across all specialtie­s.

The Residence Physician Shortage Reduction Act of 2019 would increase the number of residency slots by 15,000 by 2025.

“The nationwide physician and psychiatri­st shortage is a serious problem,” Turner said in a statement. “Medical students need the opportunit­y to learn in order to provide appropriat­e patient care.”

Ohio’s senators, Republican Rob Portman and Democrat Sherrod Brown, both said they are concerned about the psychiatri­st shortage.

Brown supports increasing funding for graduate medical education and lifting the cap on residency spots, including psychiatry, a spokesman said.

“I am concerned by the shortage of psychiatri­sts in America,” Portman said in a statement. “I’m committed to examining all options to ensure that we have a robust psychiatry workforce for today and the future.”

■ Another challenge is keeping doctors in the Miami Valley after their training is done.

Those finishing residency have a lot of options of where to practice, sometimes getting as many as 20 to 25 job offers per day from recruiters, according to Gentile. That’s why local employers start their recruitmen­t efforts early, hiring residents to moonlight and integratin­g them into local teams of providers so they’ll want to stay.

“We don’t have mountains and we don’t have oceans,” Gentile said. What Dayton does have is a culture of mentoring and a culture of education, she said. Plus, an Air Force base and large VA hospital. “Our military affiliatio­n puts us on the map.”

Doctors interested in aerospace, military psychiatry or treating veterans are attracted to working in Dayton, she said.

Many of the Air Force residents who trained here and then served assignment­s elsewhere will return to retire in the region and start civilian medical careers, Coles said.

■ Other solutions include other types of mental health care providers.

Providers need to get more creative with integrated care models, experts said, where one psychiatri­st can help multiple primary care physicians address the mental health of a larger number of patients. Nurse practition­ers also can help prescribe medication­s.

A 2017 National Council for Behavioral Health study recommende­d that teaching programs should include those integrated care models. Wright State is looking at ways to train medical students alongside nurse practition­er and social work students.

“When you train together, you tend to stay together,” she said.

■ Patients also should be aware that not every mental health condition requires a visit to a psychiatri­st. Mental health counselors, psychologi­sts and social workers can help with many issues. People are needed to fill some of those jobs, but the shortages aren’t as dire.

The National Center for Health Workforce Analysis predicts a surplus of psychiatri­c nurse practition­ers, social workers and school counselors in Ohio by 2030 but a shortage of psychiatri­c physicians assistants, psychologi­sts and addiction and mental health counselors.

■ Telemedici­ne has eased the shortage of providers, especially in rural areas. Wright State serves 1,500 patients around the state through its telepsych program, but right now a grant that pays for it only covers patients with both an intellectu­al disability and a mental health condition.

New Medicaid rules that went into effect July 4 expand the types of patients that the state insurance will cover for telepsychi­atry and lifted a restrictio­n making those within five miles of a provider ineligible.

Contact this reporter at 937328-0353 or email Katie. Wedell@coxinc.com.

 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? Dr. Racheal Johnson (left), chief resident of Wright State University Psychiatry, talks with Dr. Allison Cowan, medical director of the Wright State Psychiatry residency psychother­apy clinic at Elizabeth Place. The clinic offers low-cost appointmen­ts with psychiatry residents to help them train.
TY GREENLEES / STAFF Dr. Racheal Johnson (left), chief resident of Wright State University Psychiatry, talks with Dr. Allison Cowan, medical director of the Wright State Psychiatry residency psychother­apy clinic at Elizabeth Place. The clinic offers low-cost appointmen­ts with psychiatry residents to help them train.
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