Abstract

BackgroundMental health issues are gaining in importance in society and the economic system. At the same time, the accessibility and stigmatisation of the mental health care system in Germany can obstruct help-seeking behavior and delay early psychotherapeutic interventions. Therefore, new models of care are being established at the interface of company-supported health promotion and conventional health insurance sponsored outpatient care for people developing mental illnesses. Two large industrial companies, in cooperation with two psychosomatic clinics, have recently established a model of “psychosomatic consultation in the workplace“. This new model of care offers the opportunity for a first psychotherapeutic door to door consultation with occupational medicine within the industrial workplace. The main empirical goals of this study are:1) Describing the differences between patients who use this new diagnostic and therapeutic offer within the industrial workplace vs. patients who visit a conventional regional outpatient clinic, especially in regard to symptom duration and severity, work ability, and demographic characteristics, and2) A first evaluation of how patients may benefit more from this new model of care compared to those first seen by standard outpatient care.In the qualitative part of the study, occupational physicians, psychosomatic therapists, involved personnel and select employees of the involved companies will be asked to comment on their experiences with this new approach.Methods/DesignThe implementation study will take place in Ulm and in Stuttgart, with each site looking at one regional conventional psychosomatic outpatient clinic and one psychosomatic consultation offer within the workplace. 70 consecutive patients in each setting will be recruited (overall n = 280). For the cross-sectional study and pre-post comparison we will use established and validated survey instruments (PHQ, SF-12, WAI, MBI, IS) as well as standardized questions about health care use. For data analysis, we will use uni- and multivariate analytical methods. Qualitative data analysis (expert interviews) will be carried out using Mayring’s content analysis method.DiscussionThe results of this study have the potential to provide evidence-based knowledge about an innovative model of psychotherapeutic outpatient care and to further promote tailored solutions for early psychotherapeutic interventions within the worksite.Trial RegistrationDRKS00003184

Highlights

  • Mental health issues are gaining in importance in society and the economic system

  • Our study aims to assess the following research questions: 1. Are there differences in demographic, clinical and psychometric characteristics between patients who use the consultation offer in the workplace versus patients who use conventional outpatient care? Is this new model of mental health care successful in reaching employees suffering from psychological disorders earlier in the course of their illness, compared to patients who seek help in conventional outpatient care?

  • This new model of mental health care has been established on a step by step basis within a large automobile manufacturer in cooperation with a local psychosomatic clinic over the last six years [11]

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Summary

Introduction

Mental health issues are gaining in importance in society and the economic system. At the same time, the accessibility and stigmatisation of the mental health care system in Germany can obstruct help-seeking behavior and delay early psychotherapeutic interventions. New models of care are being established at the interface of company-supported health promotion and conventional health insurance sponsored outpatient care for people developing mental illnesses. In cooperation with two psychosomatic clinics, have recently established a model of “psychosomatic consultation in the workplace“. This new model of care offers the opportunity for a first psychotherapeutic door to door consultation with occupational medicine within the industrial workplace. Conventional access to the mental health care system, especially for outpatient psychotherapy, is usually connected to long waiting periods which primarily could raise this “fear threshold” and increase the likelihood of illness chronification [7]

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