Saturday, November 23, 2013

ACTIVELY ENGAGING ONE’S CONSTITUENCY

The Importance of Addressing Stigma:  One of the most consistent themes heard during today's policy deliberations surrounding the consequences of integrating behavioral health services within primary care is the potential for addressing the historical stigma attached to receiving mental health and/or substance abuse care.  There clearly is no quick and easy solution.  Senior colleagues might recall the almost universal silence associated with receiving a cancer diagnosis during their parents' time -- just a few decades ago -- prior to the significant advances in treatment which are heralded today.  The impressive pubic engagement efforts of the American Cancer Society, the Susan G. Komen Walks, Department of Defense cancer funding initiatives, etc. are relatively recent phenomena.  Perhaps during the coming decade the particularly debilitating barrier of stigma will also be successfully overcome; especially, we would suggest, with the unprecedented advances occurring seemingly daily within the communications and technology fields.  The Fiscal Year 2014 budget for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) includes $13.6 million for an exciting Public Awareness and Support (PAS) initiative.

The Administration:  The rapidly changing healthcare environment, the critical role behavioral health plays in achieving national health status objectives, and advances in communications technology provide new opportunities to change the way behavioral health is viewed and services are delivered in the United States.  The unmet need for prevention, treatment, and recovery support services provides a vast untapped market for SAMHSA products and services.  Opportunities to prevent or intervene early to reduce disability and death associated with mental and substance abuse disorders are often missed.  The Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Education are working to facilitate a national dialogue on the mental and emotional health of young people.  About 60% of adults experiencing a mental disorder did not receive treatment and nearly 90% of people who needed substance abuse treatment did not receive care, according to the 2010 National Survey on Drug Use and Health.  For children and adolescents, only about 1 in 5 receives the treatment they need for diagnosable mental health and substance use disorders.  Expenditures on mental and behavioral health and substance use treatment for children and adolescents alone approximate $12 billion annually. 

            By learning to recognize the signs and symptoms of mental illness and substance abuse, friends and family members can help their loved ones take action and seek care.  Trained health professionals can also work with patients and families to identify problems early.  By confronting fear and misunderstanding with facts, raising awareness about the effectiveness of prevention and treatment, and improving knowledge about when and where to seek help, SAMSHA can bring mental illness and addictions out of the shadows and help the nation achieve the full potential of prevention and treatment for mental illnesses and substance abuse.  The SAMSHA Office of Communications, through the Communications Governance Council (CGC), is charged with setting the strategic direction and policy for SAMSHA's public communication activities.  The CGC is working to assure research based approaches are used to influence behavior change for the sake of improving health, preventing injuries, protecting the environment, and/or contributing to the community.  Individual behavioral change involves five basic steps: knowledge, approval, intention, practice, and advocacy.  To employ the best communication practices and technologies that focus on creating and sustaining behavior change, SAMHSA is putting into place a new science-based life cycle approach for public education communications efforts.  The lifecycle provides a five step process for planning, creating, disseminating, promoting, and evaluating educational information produced and distributed by SAMHSA.

            SAMHSA's Public Engagement Platform (PEP) and Project Evolve, SAMHSA's web consolidation and modernization project, are funded through the Public Awareness and Support budget line.  These two initiatives provide the wide infrastructure required to advance Strategic Initiatives by engaging audiences in a meaningful way.  The internet is the primary way people engage with the government.  SAMHSA has prioritized the internet as a strategic business and communications asset and launched Project Evolve to consolidate and modernize SAMHSA's web presence.  Elimination of redundant web development efforts is a key objective for this project and the installation of a Web Content Management System will result in lower overall costs, greater efficiency, increased effectiveness, and improved service for visitors.  Related project activities include audience analysis, usability testing, and planning for the prioritized migration of information from other sites to a consolidated SAMHSA.gov.site.

            Consistent with the draft Federal Digital Strategy, the project is working to support the development of quality content and effective communications governance, and the use of modern communications platforms all to increase efficiencies in SAMHSA's web based communication efforts with the long term goals of improving customer satisfaction and achieving cost savings to the agency.  SAMHSA's PEP provides the agency's programs a consumer-oriented fulfillment system.  SAMHSA's online store (http://store.samhsa.gov) is it's most highly visible customer interface and works in concert with a call-in contact center, warehouse, email updates, exhibit program, and strategic partnerships to fulfill the publication needs of public and health services providers.  The various channels of communication managed by the Office of Communications generated more than 24 million customer interactions last year and enabled SAMHSA to gather data that illuminate the "voice" of SAMHSA customers and how well they are being served by the agency.

            Through its Knowledge Management System, SAMHSA integrates content, operations, and data collection and analytics on all PEP customer interactions.  These touch points annually include about 500,000 inquiries to the contact center; 143,400 publication orders; 21.3 million publication copies shipped; 1.7 million SAMHSA Store visitors; 530,000 PDF documents downloaded; 11.9 million email updates delivered; and 12,000 exhibit booth visitors.  SAMHSA's email update service has grown to nearly 193,000 subscribers.  PEP also distributes a bi-weekly electronic resource entitled SAMHSA Headlines that provides the behavioral health field with the latest news, upcoming events, resources, and a quarterly newsletter, SAMHSA News, that provides in-depth information on key SAMHSA developments and findings.

Just as Americans are aware of the connection between hypertension, stroke, and heart disease and accordingly take action to monitor their blood pressure they can become aware of the connection between mental and substance use disorders and physical health and take action to prevent and treat these conditions.  SAMHSA's PEP and new Web Program provides prevention, treatment, and recovery support programs the communication channels need to reach public and professional audiences with critical behavioral health information.

            The Public Awareness and Support Initiative (http://www.samhsa.gov/publicAwareness/) continues to be driven by research with SAMHSA stakeholders – including web-based public engagement strategies/platforms – and applies the communications and marketing principles of customer research and audience segmentation, message development and evaluation.  Because it is based on consumer needs and input, the Initiative is dynamic and continues to evolve based on the shifting landscape of communications technologies and government involvement with the public.  It strengthens the agency's role in "Supporting the field with Information/ Communications" by conducting and sharing information from national surveys and surveillance; vetting and sharing information about evidence-based practices (e.g., National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices [NREPP]); using the Web, print, social media, public appearances, and the press to reach the public, providers (e.g., primary, specialty, guilds, peers), and other stakeholders; and listening to and reflecting the voices of people in recovery and their families.  The requested budget will aid SAMHSA's efforts to research the best methods of collaboration with its stakeholders, which will improve its messaging and marketing; and as a result, more accurately reflect the voices of people and families in recovery.

            Interesting Developments in Other Health Professions:  Being primarily located, by choice, in my "new career" in the Daniel K. Inouye Graduate School of Nursing at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) (DoD), I have become increasingly aware of changes evolving within the broader health professions community.  I have been impressed by the continuing growth of dual degree opportunities involving Schools of Nursing and, for example, public health, business, informatics, law, religion (hospice care), as well as nursing's systematic efforts to fully implement the recommendations of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) report The Future of Nursing: Leading Change, Advancing Health.  This includes ensuring that professional nurses will be able to practice to the full extent of their education and training; achieve higher degrees of education and training through an improved education system that promotes seamless academic progression; be full partners in redesigning health care in the United States; and, requiring better data collection and information infrastructure for developing effective workplace planning and policy making.  In essence, our colleagues in nursing should be actively involved in playing a fundamental role in the transformation of our nation's health care system.  At the visionary Fall Semiannual Conference of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN), the participants were asked to develop the "capacity to wonder" how they might continue to make outstanding contributions to the nation.  Lt. General Patricia Horoho, the first woman and first ever non-physician military Surgeon General, urged the audience to "think differently" and "change the fundamental conversation," asking the Deans: "How much health is actually included in today's curriculum?"

This Fall, the Tri-Regulator Leadership Collaborative met to review issues of mutual concern and set an agenda of work for the ongoing collaboration between the Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB), the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (NABP), and the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN).  The schedule of work agreed upon included: Preparation for a historic, joint meeting of the governing boards of each organization in February, 2014.  A proposed position statement on interprofessional team-based care for adoption by each organization.  Assessing the public protection issues related to practice between and among countries and other international issues related to the regulation of health care practice.  Encouraging regular dialogue between U.S. medical, pharmacy and nurse licensing boards, including facilitation of dialogue with board members of each respective organization.  And, Planning for the second Tri-Regulator Symposium to be held in 2015.  The FSME, NABP, and NCSBN formalized their advocacy partnership in 2011 with the creation of the Collaborative.  Together, their various state member boards regulate a combined 5 million physicians, pharmacists, and nurses in the United States.  Also this Fall, Rutgers University announced the establishment of a dual doctorate in Pharmacy/Medicine at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy.  The new PharmD/MD program will be the first of its kind which "could become a model to better prepare the experts who will drive national health-care policy in the wake of the Affordable Care Act."  Those who enroll in the program are expected to take 10 years to obtain their degrees.

USUHS:  "At USUHS we have a health policy seminar dedicated to exposing students to the many professions that interface with public policy, such as psychology, nursing, and education.  The seminar features speakers who informally discuss their journeys to policy-related fields and how policy experiences influenced their career trajectories within military and civilian sectors.  Speakers discuss the different skills necessary to work within policy, including building interpersonal relationships, being persistent, and focusing upon the 'big picture.'  A recent speaker, Anthony Principi, twice serving as Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs, discussed his vision and rationale for the difficult decision to consolidate and restructure the VA hospital system in 2004.  Stephen Trachtenberg, author and former President of The George Washington University, shared stories from the perspective of a visionary university president, highlighting the successes and difficulties of working within the education policy system.  Another speaker, Clyde Hart, current communications director of the American Bus Association and former U.S. Senate confirmed Maritime Administrator and Capitol Hill staffer, encouraged students to take advantage of any opportunity to work on Capitol Hill, identifying it as the one place where he learned the most simply by listening and watching.  Since the class includes students in both psychology and nursing, we are able to engage in interdisciplinary dialogue related to many areas within policy.  Towards the end of the quarter, students are encouraged to do a field site visit.  Past site visits have included visiting the American Psychological Association (APA), the federal or state offices of Congress (my mother and I visited our local Congressman in Mississippi), and the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).  Through the seminar discussions and field experiences, students are exposed to the ways policy impacts every aspect of our lives and how we will be able to utilize our knowledge, skills, research, and clinical expertise to inform policy decisions [Omni Cassidy]."

Although there are steadily increasing numbers of public policy courses and relevant texts being offered/published within schools of nursing, this is not the case within psychology's educational institutions.  Perhaps a relevant analogy -- Today psychology is progressing nicely on addressing the complex issues surrounding Telepsychology.  Yet, in 2003 the Kaiser Family Foundation reported that "About 80% of U.S. residents who use the Internet have searched the Web to seek out health information, and most say doing so helps improve their quality of care."  Psychology's next generation must become more responsive to the changing times.  Some definitely are: "We met at the 2011 APA Convention in DC at the Speed mentoring opportunity for students and Early Career Psychologists.  After much ambivalence, I'm finally taking the plunge.  My colleagues in the Indian Health Service (IHS) and Steve Tulkin have encouraged me to pursue RxP authority.  In January 2014, I'll start the Alliant University Postdoctoral Masters in Clinical Psychopharmacology program.  I do like to believe that you planted the seed those few years ago.  Wish me luck.  Thanks.  [Casey McDougall]."

The IOM Forum on Global Violence Prevention:  Our nation's Capital hosts many exciting policy discussions, which can be transformational.  A new summary brochure produced by the IOM Forum on Global Violence Prevention details the origin, operation, and accomplishments of the Forum.  Established in 2010, it has brought together global experts from all areas of violence prevention and mitigation to facilitate multisectoral dialogue and exchange on a range of cross-cutting global violence prevention issues.  Several times per year, the Forum convenes expert workshops that explore these issues and opportunities for advancing proven or evidence-informed prevention efforts.  Violence is a major global public health problem, with multisectoral consequences for business, law enforcement, and other sectors, the impact of which is borne not only by the victims, but also by families, communities, and societies.  In 2001, violence accounted for 45 million disability-adjusted life years lost, with low- and middle-income countries bearing the largest burden.  The exact costs of violence, which include adverse health outcomes, lost productivity and economic opportunity, community deterioration, and effects on the next generation, are difficult to determine, but there is little doubt that the direct and indirect costs are great.  As quoted by the Forum's co-chair Mark Rosenberg from the Taskforce for Global Health: "In most people's minds, violence is seen as unmitigated evil, something that we have had to live with since time immemorial, and not something that we can prevent."  Nevertheless, violence can be prevented.

The past quarter-century has witnessed a shift in thinking about violence – from the assumption that violence is inevitable to an emerging scientific understanding among many different stakeholders that, through effective approaches, prevention is possible.  Violence is complex, whether interpersonal, self-directed, or collective, and, when not prevented, fosters more violence.  Effective prevention requires cross-sectional approaches developed through dialogue and collaboration among researchers, practitioners, and policy-makers whose perspectives reflect different disciplines and experiences.

During its first three operational years, the Forum explored different but related aspects of violence in a series of public workshops.  The existence of linkages and common risk factors within types of violence, as well as between different types of violence, was a constant thread through all the workshops and related activities.  Understanding these relationships is critical to preventing violence.  The Workshop on Preventing Violence Against Women and Children, for example, found the following key themes.  * The value of research and interventions that address violence against both women and children rather than treating them as "siloed" types of violence.  * The intergenerational transmission of violence.  * The need to address gender norms and roles of men and boys as part of the solution.  * The research and intervention gap in low- and middle-income countries.  And, * The need for responses that are multisectoral and are cross-cutting fields of violence prevention.  This workshop was webcast globally, allowing for the inclusion of more than 300 remote participants in more than 20 countries.

Key themes from the Workshop on Communications and Technology for Violence Prevention were: * The ability of information and communications technologies (ICT) to facilitate cross-sectoral solutions.  * The potential of ICT as a platform for scaling up effective interventions.  * The need for new methodologies for effective evaluation of interventions utilizing rapidly changing ICT.  And, * The opportunity for ICT as a tool to better reach vulnerable populations and address health disparities.  Following the momentum of this workshop, one of the Forum's sponsors, the Avon Foundation for Women, partnered with the IOM in a global mobile- and Web-based app challenge: Ending Violence @ Home.  The challenge brought together individuals from the fields of domestic violence prevention and communication technologies, raising awareness about and helping prevent domestic violence against women and children.  This was a globally-issued challenge, and teams from both the United States and abroad entered.  The numerous submissions covered a wide array of innovative approaches to prevent violence at home.  The four winning submissions showcased three different approaches: changing cultural attitudes about violence against women, preventing dating violence on university campuses, and equipping health care providers to detect and prevent domestic violence.  Other workshops include: Social and Economic Costs of Violence, Contagion of Violence, Evidence for Violence Prevention Across the Lifespan and Around the World, and Elder Abuse and Its Prevention [www.iom.edu/globalviolenceprevention].  There is tremendous potential for the behavioral sciences to contribute to a healthier society.  Aloha,

Pat DeLeon, former APA President – Division 29 – November, 2013

 

Saturday, November 16, 2013

INTEGRATED PRIMARY CARE

APA annual conventions are always inspiring, and Honolulu was exceptionally so.  Our next generation of colleagues clearly understands that the nation's health care environment is undergoing unprecedented change and, as former APA President Suzanne Bennett Johnson has noted: Medicine's recent paradigm shift from the biomedical to the biopsychosocial model is occurring with significant implications for psychology… providing opportunities and challenges.  President Obama's landmark Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act envisions patient-centered, interdisciplinary primary caresystems, capitalizing upon the tremendous potential for data-based measures of quality health care, inherent in the communications and technology fields.  Prevention, wellness, and holistic care will become the expected norm by educated consumers (i.e., patients) – with necessary modifications to our current reimbursement models.

            One policy development that has particularly impressed me has been the increasing commitment by our sister professions' educational institutions to actively engage local communities in their own health care.  This Fall, I visited our College of Pharmacy's annual health fair, held in a popular shopping mall on the Big Island of Hawaii.  152 Pharmacy students (in their white coats) with four faculty/community pharmacist volunteers, along with 68 community volunteers, served 372 participants; 159 receiving free health screenings and 133 entries in the "children's poster contest."  This was an exciting community event – all ages, entertainment, music, etc.  Psychology's graduate students could have made a significant contribution, addressing biopsychosocial issues such as smoking and substance-use cessation, relaxation techniques, and preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS.  This is the future!  NPR/ Kaiser Health News: "The state of Oregon is trying some experiments to bring different kinds of medical professionals under the same roof… in a primary care setting, where doctors often have to deal with stomach aches and migraines that end up stemming from mental, rather than physical, problems" – the vision of Robin Henderson, St. Charles Health System.

            Under the leadership of Kimber Bogard, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) Board on Children, Youth, and Families has proffered a number of meaningful agendas for colleagues to pursue that would make a real difference.  Following the recommendations of the 2009 IOM report on Preventing Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral Disorders Among Young People, the Board launched a Forum to advance an agenda on integrating prevention and treatment services that address children's cognitive, affective, and behavioral health in settings where they are seen and cared for.  These places include schools, community based organizations, primary care offices, and child welfare settings.  How to implement and scale up evidence-informed practices will be a focus of the activities of the Forum.  Professor Emeritus Michael Murphy, with his lifelong passion for public policy, undoubtedly would urge IPA to engage in implementing effective programs targeting child abuse and neglect.  Each year child protection services receive reports involving six million children, while many incidents go unreported.  The IOM notes since its last report two decades ago, there has been great progress in child abuse and neglect research; yet, a coordinated, national research infrastructure with high-level federal support still needs to be established.  Clearly there are significant long-term developmental and biological effects.  Adverse outcomes include depression, PTSD, poor physical health, and attention difficulties and delinquency.  Children age three and under are more likely to experience abuse and neglect.  Every experience is unique.  Almost half of all Americans will meet one or more clinical criteria for mental and behavioral health or substance abuse disorders in their life; the first onset usually in childhood or adolescence.  Lifetime prevalence may be as high as 37% by age 16.  Expenditures on mental and behavioral health and substance use treatment for children and adolescents approximate $12 billion annually.  Throughout the convention, there were numerous symposia highlighting effective family-based initiatives.  What will be the role of State Associations in furthering this important policy agenda?  Aloha,

 

Pat DeLeon, former APA President – Indiana Psychological Association – October, 2013

Monday, November 4, 2013

THE FUTURE HAS ARRIVED

   As President Obama's landmark Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) is steadily implemented over the next several years, psychology has an unprecedented opportunity to provide proactive and visionary leadership.   At this year's inspirational APA State Leadership Conference, Katherine Nordal stressed the importance of psychology's active presence at the state level and effectively demonstrating to the public-at-large psychology's "value-add" to quality healthcare.  "At this time last year, the future of the ACA seemed uncertain.  Since then, we've had a Supreme Court decision that upheld the ACA and the November reelection of President Barack Obama.  The ACA has survived, and implementation of the largest expansion of the health care safety net will proceed.  The clock is ticking toward full implementation of the law and January 1, 2014 is coming quickly.  But January 1st is really just a mile maker in this marathon we call health care reform.  We're facing uncharted territory with health care reform, and there's no universal roadmap to guide us.  The details of ACA implementation vary from state to state, and so do the key players.  I believe that if we are not valued as a health profession, it will detract from our value in other practice arenas as well.  So regardless of how we feel about the current state of our health care system, psychology must take its seat at the table and contribute to the solutions needed to fix our ailing system.  No one else is fighting the battles for psychology and don't expect them to.  Health care reform is a marathon – we're in it for the long haul.  New models of care and changes in health care financing won't take shape overnight.  We can't hope to finish the marathon called health care reform if we're not at the starting line.  Fortunately, many psychology leaders have embraced our call to action."

            Earlier this year I had the opportunity of attending the Alaskan Native Southcentral Foundation Nuka conference where former Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Donald Berwick described the revolutionary magnitude of change coming to our nation's health care environment and the pain that today's practitioners will experience as their daily professional lives are inevitably significantly altered.  The underlying objective of the ACA is to foster a data-driven, patient-centered system in which priority is given to preventive, holistic, and wellness-oriented care and where state-of-the-art advances in communications technology will be effectively utilized.  Cross provider and cross patient population comparisons (i.e., a public health oriented approach) will become the norm.  Isolated professional "silos" will give way to coordinated systems of care.  If one reads through the statutory text of "ObamaCare" there are very few express references to psychology – and, very few (if any) actual limitations on our potential contributions.  The ACA represents a major expansion of our nation's "safety net" which has historically been the responsibility of Medicare and Medicaid.  Critical policy decisions are once again being made primarily at the state level.  If we are honest with ourselves, we must recognize that organized psychology has not been systematically engaged in addressing the pressing needs of these underserved beneficiary populations, nor in working collaboratively with other disciplines (such as Advanced Practice Nurses and Clinical Pharmacists) to foster interdisciplinary, patient-centered, integrated primary health systems – either clinically or within our training institutions.  These are the signature elements of the ACA and health policy experts appreciate that the various components (e.g., licensure mobility, comparative effectiveness research, and matching educational requirements to clinical needs) have been deliberated in a number of far-reaching health policy conferences and documents (including those sponsored by the Institute of Medicine (IOM)) over the past several decades.  Professional isolation (i.e., silos) may be comfortable, but must radically change.

Unprecedented Opportunities:  The ACA will provide for the largest expansion of mental health and substance-use coverage in a generation, with 32.1 million Americans gaining access to these services, while another 30.4 million currently with some coverage will gain federal parity protection.  Under ACA insurance offered in the new marketplace must cover a core set of "essential health benefits," including mental health and substance-use disorder services.  The coverage for behavioral health services must be generally comparable with coverage for medical and surgical care.  Ken Pope recently shared a similar perspective, noting that in 2009 public and private mental health spending totaled approximately $150 billion, more than double its level in inflation-adjusted terms in 1986.  Those criticizing the ACA for primarily political reasons might naively ask whether the nation or the Administration is really committed to this magnitude of change.  Early this year a Kaiser Foundation/ Robert Wood Johnson Foundation/ Harvard School of Public Health survey found that seniors (i.e., those utilizing the program) were most likely to report that Medicare is working well (80%) and that the majority of Americans (67%) believe that federal spending on improving health actually saves money.  This summer representatives from the 16 states that by then had elected to run state exchanges met with senior Administration officials in our nation's Capital.  According to Hawaii's Coral Andrews, they were very pleasantly surprised to hear President Obama himself join their conference call, requesting a personal briefing on the progress (and tribulations) they were experiencing.  Recently I was on a conference call during which Vice President Biden reached out to approximately 3,000 nurses seeking their leadership and active support for educating the public regarding the benefits of the ACA, under which 95% of uninsured Americans will see lower than expected health care premiums in 2014.  Also present were two high ranking Administration officials, the Administrators of HRSA (Mary Wakefield) and of CMS (Marilyn Tavenner), both nurses!  Opportunities always exist for those who are engaged, as Katherine Nordal proffered.  Now is the time to develop and promote creative initiatives that will actively integrate behavioral health within primary health care.  This is a major challenge.  However, with the expected U.S. Senate retirements, the next Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which has jurisdiction over Medicare and Medicaid (i.e., major components of ACA), will most likely be Senator Ron Wyden, a longtime friend of psychology and professional nursing.  Colleagues James Werth, Jr.; Greg Hinrichsen, and Mary Polce-Lynch served with Senator Wyden as APA Congressional Fellows.

Psychology's Future Really Depends Upon Our Next Generation:  "My introduction to Former APA President James Bray's vision of Speed Mentoring occurred several years ago at the APA convention in Toronto.  Like 'speed dating', the APA program is designed to offer graduate students and early career psychologists (ECPs) the opportunity to meet briefly with a number of renowned psychologists in a very compressed period of time.  I so happened to be talking with one of these renowned psychologists as he was walking to the invited event.  As we approached the registration desk, the event coordinator received a last minute cancellation from a scheduled mentor.  My colleague volunteered me as a last second (albeit un-renowned) fill in.

"In this program, mentors meet with 4 separate groups of no more than 10 'mentees' in an hour's time.  Each brief group encounter lasts approximately 12 minutes.  The discussions tend to be very lively and a surprising number of topics are covered in this fast-paced Q&A session.  Then the bell rings and the mentees move on to another station.  As the un-renowned, fill-in mentor, the students and ECPs were politely inquisitive as to who in the world I might be.  I told them that I worked at a major medical center within the Department of Defense where a psychologist was the chief of an independent Department of Psychology.  In addition to the traditional adult, child, and neuropsychology programs, I mentioned that our psychologists were also responsible for a chronic pain program (where a psychologist-nurse supervises the work of anesthesiologists, nurses, chiropractors, psychologists, acupuncturists, and massage therapists), a traumatic brain injury program (supervising physicians, nurses, and psychologists), and a behavioral telehealth program (supervising a dozen psychologists and psychiatrists providing health care exclusively via computer video).  I also mentioned that we had an APA-approved internship program, a post-doc residency program, and three APA-approved fellowship programs (child psychology, neuropsychology, and health psychology); the last offering a post-doctoral Master's degree in clinical psychopharmacology as an option.

"To a person, the students and ECPs were very surprised.  I was surprised, as well, that they had not heard of psychologists serving in these roles (yes, they knew we were members of multidisciplinary teams, but not leaders of these specialized programs.)  Nor had they heard of a clinical psychopharmacology degree (which would prepare them for state or DoD privileges in psychopharmacology) incorporated into a specialized fellowship program.  For many, the notion that we could deliver needed services to underserved and rural populations via telehealth was also a novel idea.  The ensuing questions and discussion focused on the role of psychologists as leaders in health care and the opportunities to expand our scope of practice.

"It was a great pleasure interacting with these young professionals and, to my own surprise and delight, I have been invited to participate in every subsequent Speed Mentoring event now held annually at the APA convention.  While there have been significant gains and losses for our psychology programs in these interim years, the students and ECPs at the Speed Mentoring event appear to find the unusual things we are doing at the medical center quite interesting [Ray Folen]."  Aloha,

Pat DeLeon, former APA President – National Register – October, 2013