Providing psychiatric consultation services for individuals living in nursing homes with Dr. Bradford L. Frank
Release Date: 01/06/2021
Psychcast
In this segment of Clinical Correlation, Dr. Renee Kohanski completes part 2 of her review of the most effective treatments for patients with severe anxiety. She also announces that, after almost 200 episodes, the Psychcast is taking an indefinite pause. To reach Dr. Kohanski, email her at . To reach Dr. Lorenzo Norris, host of the Psychcast, email him at lnorris@mfa.gwu.edu. Clinical Correlation was published every other Monday on the Psychcast feed. You can email the show at , and you can learn more about MDedge Psychiatry here: .
info_outlinePsychcast
Craig Chepke, MD, speaks with Lorenzo Norris, MD, about changes he made to his practice during the COVID-19 pandemic, and plans to make some of those changes permanent. is a psychiatrist in Huntersville, N.C., and adjunct associate professor at Atrium Health and adjunct assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He disclosed serving as a consultant and speaker for Otsuka and Janssen, and as a speaker for Alkermes. is associate dean of student affairs and administration at George Washington University, Washington. He has no disclosures. Take-home points Dr....
info_outlinePsychcast
John “Jack” Rozel, MD, MSL, returns to the Psychcast to talk with Lorenzo Norris, MD, about American gun violence and steps clinicians can take to disrupt it. is medical director of the resolve Crisis Network. He also serves as associate professor of psychiatry and adjunct professor of law at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Rozel is also past president of the American Association for Emergency Psychiatry. He has no disclosures. is associate dean of student affairs and administration at George Washington University, Washington. He has no disclosures. Take-home points Mass violence with...
info_outlinePsychcast
In the first part of a two-part series on anxiety disorder, Dr. Kohanski shares what may be some surprising facts information about prescribing of the tried-and-true agents of anxiety, along with some clinical pearls. Clinical Correlation is published every other Monday on the Psychcast feed. You can email the show at , and you can learn more about MDedge Psychiatry here: .
info_outlinePsychcast
Omar Sultan Haque, MD, PhD, talks with Lorenzo Norris, MD, about the need for medical schools to become responsive to physicians, medical students, and residents with mental disabilities. is a physician, social scientist, and philosopher who is affiliated with the department of global health and social medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston. He disclosed founding Dignity Brain Health, a clinic that seeks to provide clinical care for patients struggling with major depressive disorder. Dr. Haque also serves as medical director of Dignity Brain Health. is associate dean of student affairs...
info_outlinePsychcast
Géraldine Fauville, PhD, joins Lorenzo Norris, MD, to discuss some of the causes of Zoom fatigue and strategies that can make videoconferences productive. is the lead researcher on the Zoom Exhaustion & Fatigue Scale project. She also is assistant professor in the department of education, communication, and learning at the University of Gothenburg (Sweden). Dr. Fauville has no disclosures. is associate dean of student affairs and administration at George Washington University, Washington. He has no disclosures. Take-home points Dr. Fauville started her research on Zoom fatigue in the ...
info_outlinePsychcast
In this week's installment of Clinical Correlation, Renee Kohanski, MD, unpacks the new Open Notes mandate. Clinical Correlation is published every other Monday on the Psychcast feed. You can email the show at , and you can learn more about MDedge Psychiatry here: .
info_outlinePsychcast
Guest host Vicki L. Ellingrod, PharmD, talks with Kristen M. Ward, PharmD, and Amy Pasternak, PharmD, about integrating pharmacogenomic testing into psychiatric practice. is senior associate dean at the University of Michigan College of Pharmacy, Ann Arbor, and professor of psychiatry in the medical school. She is also section editor of the savvy psychopharmacology department in Current Psychiatry. Dr. Ellingrod has no relevant financial relationships to disclose. and are clinical assistant professors of pharmacy at the University of Michigan. Dr. Ward and Dr. Pasternak report no...
info_outlinePsychcast
Lorenzo Norris, MD, speaks with Tonya Cross Hansel, PhD, about processing incidents such as the Jan. 6, 2021, siege on the Capitol, and determining how to foster recovery. is an associate professor with the Tulane University School of Social Work in New Orleans. She has no conflicts of interest. is associate dean of student affairs and administration at George Washington University, Washington. He has no disclosures. Take-home points Dr. Hansel’s research focuses on measuring traumatic experiences and implementing systematic recovery initiatives that address negative symptoms by...
info_outlinePsychcast
One wouldn't think autism spectrum disorder belonged in the same universe as narcissistic personality disorder. Yet sometimes emotional disconnection and seeming lack of empathy leads to miscommunication. There is one key difference, however. Clinical Correlation is published every other Monday on the Psychcast feed. You can email the show at , and you can learn more about MDedge Psychiatry here: .
info_outlineBradford L. Frank, MD, MPH, MBA, conducts a Masterclass on how to provide nursing home consultations for psychiatrists. The documents Dr. Frank refers to during this Masterclass are available at (https://bit.ly/3rWqfcK)
Dr. Frank is a board-certified geriatric psychiatrist who provides consultations for more than 30 nursing homes in North Dakota. He has no disclosures.
Take-home points
- Dr. Frank reviews practical information about documentation, prescribing, and diagnoses for psychiatric clinicians who treat individuals living in nursing homes.
- The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has many rules and regulations governing the psychiatric treatment of individuals in nursing homes, including special mental status testing, a policy of gradual dose reduction, and restrictions on how long certain medications can be used.
Documentation
- Even for geriatric patients who live in nursing homes, a full past psychiatric history, including substance abuse and social history, is essential to diagnosis and treatment. To obtain these histories, Dr. Frank sends documents to the nursing home to be completed ahead of time, and then, while he starts to make his differential diagnoses, he talks with the nursing staff about why they want the consultation.
- The Brief Interview for Mental Status (BIMS) is a 15-item mental status exam mandated by the CMS during nursing home evaluations. A score of 13-15 indicates that a patient is cognitively intact, 8-12 indicates moderately impaired, and <8 is severe impairment. However, even patients with a BIMS score of 15 may still be diagnosed with moderate dementia when a more sensitive neuropsychiatric assessment is used. Patients should also complete a Patient Health Questionaire–9 and have labs done as they would in a clinic.
- The assessment must also address gradual dose reduction using language from the CMS (see below).
Prescribing and medications
- Gradual dose reduction is a CMS policy defined as “the stepwise tapering of a dose to determine if symptoms, conditions, or risks can be managed by a lower dose or if the dose or medication can be discontinued.” In collaboration with nursing home staff, prescribers must attempt to taper the doses of psychotropic medications during at least two quarters during the first year of the prescription and at least annually thereafter.
- The Food and Drug Administration has provided a black-box warning for the use of atypical antipsychotics in geriatric patients with dementia, and their use in such patients is audited by the CMS. To avoid censure and low ratings, nursing home clinicians must prescribe antipsychotics only for psychotic symptoms, such as hallucinations and delusions, and not for “dementia” or “agitation.”
- As-needed (PRN) antipsychotic medications can only be used for 14 days, and to extend the period another 14 days, the patient must be evaluated in person by the primary prescriber. PRN medications from other drug classes, such as benzodiazepines, can be used for longer without an exam, but their timeline must be specifically documented.
- Psychiatrists are most commonly consulted in nursing homes for agitation, and antipsychotics are not supposed to be used solely for agitation. Dr. Frank recommends citalopram (maximum dose of 20 mg), then escitalopram, Nuedexta (dextromethorphan HBr and quinidine sulfate), and pimavanserin for agitation associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD).
Diagnosis
- Research based on autopsy findings has concluded that mixed etiology dementia is the most common type of dementia. On autopsy, AD is concurrently found with either vascular dementia, as evidenced by cerebral infarcts, or Lewy body dementia. To use cognitive enhancers that are FDA approved only for AD, Dr. Frank will update the diagnosis to multiple etiologies with a severity specifier.
- Frank discusses that nursing homes are reimbursed at a higher rate for the diagnoses of restlessness and agitation (R45.1), noncompliance (Z91.19), and wandering (V40.31), and these are helpful diagnoses because they describe behaviors. Nursing homes use ICD-10 codes to diagnoses dementia with or without behavioral disturbance. For psychosis not attributed to delirium or severe dementia, Dr. Frank uses psychotic disorder with delusions or hallucinations because of a known physiological condition (F06.2 and F06.0). Regulatory agencies recommend against use of the unspecified diagnoses.
References
Center for Clinical Standards and Quality/Survey & Certification Group. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. 2016 Mar 25: 21-5.
Minimum Data Set – Version 3.0. Resident Assessment and Care Screening. Brief Inventory Mental Status exam: 7-8.
Bennett DA et al. Curr Alzheimer Res. 2012 Jul 9(6):646-63.
Yunusa I et al. JAMA Netw Open. 2019;2(3):e190828.
* * *
Show notes by Jacqueline Posada, MD, associate producer of the Psychcast; assistant clinical professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at George Washington University, Washington; and staff physician at George Washington Medical Faculty Associates, also in Washington. Dr. Posada has no conflicts of interest.