Giving Psychologists the Privilege to Prescribe

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Building on the Foundations of Oregon's

Landmark Mental Health Parity Legislation

 

The fog of mental illness:

 

Every day people we personally know – friends, neighbors, coworkers and even family members – struggle to overcome the fog of depression or other mental health disorders. Just as frustrating and life disrupting is their battle to get timely and consistent professional care. Tens of thousands of Oregonians are affected by the complexity of Oregon’s mental health care system.

Appointments are made with a family doctor (primary care physician), a counselor or a psychologist. The doctor may recommend medication or make a referral to a psychiatrist, perhaps located in distant city if the patient lives in a rural community. That’s the evaluation phase.

Treatment and follow-up is more complicated, as told by Stephanie and Steve, two patients who bravely tell their stories in the video at the top of this page. When prescriptions were recommended, repeated and time-consuming trips were made for brief med checks. Then it was back to the psychologist, who spent the most time with each providing therapy.

More back and forth over a period of months. It’s the same story throughout Oregon.


We can restore severely disrupted lives:


What if we break this cycle, expanding the quality of Oregon’s mental health care and relieve stress on the current overburdened system at the same time? We can.

RxP is shorthand for our proposal to grant appropriately trained, already licensed psychologists the right to prescribe medication [psychotropic] as part of a patient’s mental health treatment options. Psychiatrists, family doctors and some nurses can write these prescriptions. But, psychologists can’t.

The power to prescribe medications also is the power to unprescribe, providing psychologists with the ability to quickly modify or change prescriptions in a more timely way if those drugs aren’t working. The prescriptive authority for psychologists could cut days or weeks from the time a patient waits to have medication adjusted.


Let’s put more hands on the problem:


We know patients get better, and stay better longer, with a combination of psychotherapy and medication. Granting RxP will benefit all Oregonians – especially those in rural communities.

The challenge is that adults seeking help often visit a counselor or psychologist, and then see their primary care physician to get medication, or vice versa. Some patients drive to distant cities for brief visits with a psychiatrist. Parents of young children find the system more complex and frustrating.

Let’s continue what we started:


We can’t truly have mental health parity – the right to equal access to treatment under our system of care – if quality care isn’t as readily available. Oregon lawmakers passed landmark legislation in 2005 granting parity. But, if our network of care isn’t expanded, the dream of parity remains in the distant future.

And the lives of many Oregonians remain at risk.






NINE STATES LOOK AT RxP
Proposals to grant prescription-writing privileges to certain qualified psychologists have been introduced in nine states this year. For a roundup, see a story peprinted here with permission from “The National Psychologist.”

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BULLETIN POSTS COMPELLING STORY

BEND, ORE. (April 12, 2007) – The daily newspaper in Bend, Ore., The Bulletin, has published a compelling and comprehensive story about a mental health patient who ended his life. The article lists the pros and cons of granting prescription-writing privileges to psychologists. The newspaper has granted users of this site a no fee link to this remarkable story.

 
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