Mental Illness and Medical Care: Integrating Psychiatry into General Medicine
MTA
A multidisciplinary manual for diagnosing and managing psychiatric comorbidity in medical patients
This book provides a comprehensive manual for the integration of psychiatric care into general medical settings, arguing that the traditional separation of mental and physical health leads to suboptimal patient outcomes. It establishes the immense epidemiological and economic burden of psychiatric comorbidity—particularly depression, anxiety, and delirium—among patients with chronic illnesses like diabetes, cancer, and heart disease. To address these challenges, the text details various organizational frameworks, such as the Collaborative Care Model and Consultation-Liaison psychiatry, which utilize multidisciplinary teams and measurement-based tools like the PHQ-9 and GAD-7 to proactively identify and track mental health concerns within primary and specialty care workflows.
The manual offers deep clinical guidance on diagnosing and managing complex neuropsychiatric presentations in the medically ill. It covers the detection and prevention of delirium, the management of substance use disorders, and the treatment of somatic symptom and functional neurological disorders. A significant portion of the book is dedicated to psychopharmacology, providing nuanced advice on prescribing antidepressants, antipsychotics, and mood stabilizers to patients with compromised organ function. These chapters emphasize the importance of "starting low and going slow" while remaining vigilant about drug-disease interactions, QTc prolongation, and metabolic side effects in patients already burdened by polypharmacy.
Beyond pharmacotherapy, the text champions behavioral interventions and psychotherapy adapted for medical environments, such as Brief Strategic Therapy and Motivational Interviewing. It highlights the necessity of addressing the "whole person" by considering developmental stages—from pediatric to geriatric populations—and the profound impact of social determinants of health and cultural humility on treatment equity. Ethical and legal considerations regarding decisional capacity and risk assessment for suicidality or violence are also explored, providing clinicians with tools to navigate the complex balance between patient autonomy and safety in a hospital or clinic setting.
The concluding sections focus on the systemic requirements for successful integration, including team-based workflows, clear professional roles, and quality improvement strategies. The book addresses the practicalities of sustainability, offering guidance on navigating healthcare billing codes (such as those for Collaborative Care) and demonstrating return on investment through reduced hospital readmissions and improved chronic disease markers. Ultimately, the work serves as a pragmatic roadmap for healthcare leaders and clinicians to dismantle medical silos, advocating for a future where mental health is treated as an inseparable component of general medical practice.
This book is intended for healthcare professionals working at the intersection of mental and physical health, including primary care providers, hospitalists, medical specialists, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, pharmacists, nurses, and healthcare administrators. It is especially valuable for those seeking practical guidance on integrating psychiatric care into general medical settings, managing comorbid conditions, and implementing team‑based, measurement‑based approaches to improve patient outcomes.
March 7, 2026
English
60,642 words
4 hours 15 minutes
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