Psychiatrists  Shift Away From Providing Psychotherapy 
Marlene Busko 
Medscape Medical News 2008. ©  2008 Medscape 
August 6, 2008 — A declining number of office-based psychiatrists in the United States are providing psychotherapy, according to results from a national 10-year survey.
Analysis of data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) showed that the percentage of office visits to psychiatrists that involved psychotherapy provision dropped from 44% in 1996–1997 to 29% in 2004–2005.
August 6, 2008 — A declining number of office-based psychiatrists in the United States are providing psychotherapy, according to results from a national 10-year survey.
Analysis of data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) showed that the percentage of office visits to psychiatrists that involved psychotherapy provision dropped from 44% in 1996–1997 to 29% in 2004–2005.
"There were fewer psychiatrists  who specialized in psychotherapy in 2005 than in 1996, and the  psychiatrists who did provide psychotherapy for all of their patients  had different profiles from other psychiatrists," study coauthor Ramin  Mojtabai, MD, then from Beth Israel Medical Center and now from the  Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, in Baltimore, Maryland,  told Medscape Psychiatry.
Psychiatrists who continued to  provide psychotherapy to all their patients tended to be in solo  practices in the Northeast with patients who were older than age 25  years, white, self-paying rather than paying via insurance, and  diagnosed with less severe illnesses, such as dysthymia or personality  disorders, he noted. 
"I did not expect to find this  strong a relationship between provision of psychotherapy and either  insurance on the 1 hand or region on the other hand," he said.
The study, by Dr. Mojtabai and  coauthor Mark Olfson, MD, from Columbia University Medical Center and  New York State Psychiatric Institute, in New York, is published in the  August issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry.
Financial Disincentives
Practice guidelines recommend  psychotherapy alone or with medications for psychiatric disorders such  as major depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, and bipolar  disorder.
Yet new research suggests  changes in reimbursement policies and the introduction of newer  psychotropic medications are contributing to a decline in the provision  of psychotherapy by US psychiatrists.
"A recent study showed that for  every 45 minutes of psychotherapy, physicians are reimbursed less than  if they had three 15-minute medication management visits, so insurance  policies have a built-in disincentive for psychiatrists to provide  psychotherapy," said Dr. Mojtabai. He added there are many more types of  antipsychotic medications available now than there were 10 years ago. 
In light of these changes as  well as the debate about the place of psychotherapy in contemporary  psychiatry practice and training, the investigators examined trends in  provision of psychotherapy by office-based psychiatrists.
They analyzed data from a  1996–2005 NAMCS survey of a national sample of US office-based  psychiatrists, which is based on treatment offered in a typical week.
Psychotherapy visits were  defined as those lasting longer than 30 minutes. The survey provided  patient demographic information as well as data about payment type,  psychiatric diagnosis, and office setting (such as solo or group  practice). 
The researchers found that  psychotherapy was provided in 5597 of 14,108 visits during a 10-year  period, but that the percentage of visits involving psychotherapy  declined from 44% to 29% (P < .001). 
Impact Unclear
In a typical week, 215 of the  study's 756 practices (28.4%) did not provide psychotherapy during any  visits, and 92 (12.2%) provided psychotherapy during all visits. 
Further analysis showed a  significant decrease in practices in which all patients received  psychotherapy — from19.1% in 1995–1996 to 10.8% in 2004–2005. 
It appears psychiatrists are  less interested in specializing in psychotherapy in 2005 than in 1996,  said Dr. Mojtabai. In addition, there may be greater patient demand for  medication, since many perceive psychotherapy to be too time-consuming.
However, he added, it is  premature to jump to conclusions. "Patients may be receiving more  psychotherapy from other providers, such as psychologists, social  workers, or other therapists, and these data do not reveal whether the  changes in therapy modality have had a positive, negative, or neutral  impact on patient outcomes."
reference: Arch Gen  Psychiatry. 2008;65:962-970
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