Michigan Screening for Treatment
and Research Triage (M-START)
A core
component of
The University of Michigan Depression Center
The Michigan Screening for Treatment and Research Triage
(M-START) is a newly developed component of the Depression
Center’s information technology infrastructure incorporating
a brief telephone-screening interview and patient database.
The purpose of M-START is to enhance clinical care, administrative
functioning, research recruitment, and the coordination of
patient-related activities.
M-START is the first link in a network
of treatment options and research projects
available within the University of Michigan
Depression Center. It begins with a phone
interview during the patient’s first
contact and the result is a brief but comprehensive
overview of patients’ current symptoms,
environment, and treatment history. More
than 50 members from a variety of disciplines
including Psychiatry, Internal Medicine,
Family Medicine, Pediatrics, and the School
of Public Health, helped develop M-START.
This ensured that the most important clinical
areas were covered. The M-START database
is Oracle-based, housed in an environment
supported by the Health Systems information
technology division, and meets all UMHS
standards for data security.
M-START is web-based and utilizes branched
logic to tailor the interview to the patient’s
specific needs. Each question is determined
by the patient’s answer to the previous
question. For example, separate question
streams are available for adults and children,
to allow for age-appropriate assessment.
Standardized text is provided for most items,
and mandatory assessment areas are identified,
ensuring that basic clinical information
is obtained for all patients entering the
Depression Center and the Psychiatry Department. This
structured interview permits efficient triage
of patients to appropriate clinical services
and specialty clinics. A current department
study is attempting to establish a patient
profile that predicts poor outcomes and
high utilization, so that at-risk patients
can be offered specialized treatment at
an early stage in their care when it is
most important.
During the phone interview, patients are
also asked about their willingness to participate
in current research on depression and related
disorders. This provides an opportunity
for interested patients to learn more about
projects designed to advance knowledge about
depressive disorders, and the opportunity
for investigators to identify patients who
wish to contribute to research. Routinely
asking callers if they are willing to be
contacted about research participation provides
a renewable, formerly untapped, pool of
potential subjects who can be pre-screened
for eligibility based on their interview
responses. This is particularly valuable
for research studies that target difficult-to-reach
populations.
Currently, the M-START interview is being
conducted by staff at the Michigan Center
for Diagnosis and Referral (M-CDR) appointment
line. An average of 250 adult patients who
are new to the system are screened each
month. Pilot data on 291 patients indicate
that 52% are interested in research opportunities,
and that 72% of individuals with a family
history of a psychiatric disorder wish to
learn more about research participation.
Future development plans for M-START include
the capacity to modify the interview and
dataset to ensure longevity within the dynamic
environment of research and clinical care.
These include incorporating M-START as part
of the University of Michigan Health System’s
centralized patient database, and having
patient profiles accessible through the
University of Michigan electronic medical
record, CareWeb. A final development stage
will allow customization modules so that
specialized clinics and research studies
can create unique assessment pages that
also become part of the patient’s
common record.
Last updated on:
Friday, 26-Jan-2007 14:55:06 EST
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