Performance Dynamics In Military Behavioral Health Clinics
Author(s)
Lyan, Dmitriy Edward
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The prevalence of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and other related behavioral
health
conditions among active duty service members and their families has grown over 100% in the past six
years and are now estimated to afflict 18% of the total military force. A 2007 DoD task force on
mental health concluded that the current military psychological health care system is insufficient
to meet the needs of the served population. In spite of billions of dollars committed to hundreds
of programs and improvement initiatives since then, the system continues to experience provider
shortages, surging costs, poor access to and quality of care as well as persistently high serviceR
related suicide rates.
We developed a model to study how the resourcing policies and incentive structures interact with
the operations of military behavioral health clinics and contribute to their ability to provide
effective care. We show that policies and incentives skewed towards increased patient loads and
improvement in access to initial care result in a number of vicious cycles that reinforce provider
shortages, increase costs and decrease access to care. Additionally we argue that insufficient
informational feedback contributes to incorrect attributions and the persistence of ineffective
policies. Finally we propose a set of policies and enabling performance metrics that can contribute
to sustained improvement in system performance by turning death spirals into virtuous cycles
leading to higher provider and patient satisfaction, better quality of care and more efficient
resource utilization contributing to better healthcare outcomes and increased levels of
medical
readiness.