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With this issue, The Primary Care Companion for CNS Disorders enters its 20th year of publication. Since its first issue in 1999, PCC has been steadfast in its mission to provide information relevant to clinical practice at the interface of primary care with psychiatry and neurology. This clinical realm has seen drastic changes over these 20 years, both in practice and in the conveyance of cutting-edge professional information.
With this issue, The Primary Care Companion for CNS Disorders enters its 20th year of publication. Since its first issue in 1999, PCC has been steadfast in its mission to provide information relevant to clinical practice at the interface of primary care with psychiatry and neurology. This clinical realm has seen drastic changes over these 20 years, both in practice and in the conveyance of cutting-edge professional information.
In 1999, evidence and guidelines did not support screening for major depressive disorder. Many in primary care practice reported, in good faith, that they had never or rarely ever encountered a patient with bipolar disorder. Primary care physicians routinely were ineligible for payment for visits with a psychiatric diagnostic code. All selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors were branded, and the tricyclic antidepressants remained in common use. The goal of treatment was to obtain a response. Practice mainly centered on solitary doctor-patient relationships, and contact between primary care physicians and psychiatrists was unusual—the sharing of even the most limited of clinical information was often considered a breach of patient confidentiality reinforced by completely separate record systems. Yet, Dr J. Sloan Manning eloquently captured in his inaugural editorial how some primary care clinicians were recognizing that treatment of psychiatric disease in the primary care setting leads to marked patient improvement, although not without risks. Professionally, many of us in primary care practice were limited by a lack of knowledge of psychiatry and expertise in psychiatric diagnosis and in use of medications and nonpharmacologic therapies. The field was limited by a dearth of publications responsive to this need. Our publisher, Dr John Shelton, was visionary in recognizing this gap and launched The Primary Care Companion to The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. Only 5 years later, in 2004, the need for this quality initiative was recognized by PCC’s acceptance by the US National Library of Medicine (NLM) for inclusion in PubMed Central. The expansion to include full indexing and abstracting by NLM in PubMed/MEDLINE in late 2016 further affirmed Dr Shelton’s vision.
Over the past 20 years, primary care psychiatry has come into its own. Its scope has greatly expanded—primary care clinicians now routinely attend not only to major depressive disorder and anxiety but also to bipolar disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder and other trauma-related disorders, eating disorders, addiction care, and even the long-term care of those with schizophrenia. This expansion has been made possible by the restructuring of clinical care from the solitary physician-patient visit to one that is team-based involving primary care advanced practice nurses, physician assistants, psychiatric social workers, psychologists, and clinical pharmacists and case managers. Patient visits have been augmented by continued contact using electronic modalities. The chasm between primary care physicians and psychiatrists is being replaced by collaborative engagement that responds to individual patient complexities and provides a rich vehicle for the bidirectional education of the primary care team and psychiatrist. The goal of treatment has evolved to include obtaining remission of symptoms and improving functioning.
The content and potential for benefit of primary care psychiatry also has expanded. The conceptual mind-body framework that historically separated psychiatry from the rest of medicine is being replaced by the realization that the brain does not recognize or abide by this split. We have advanced from recognizing that primary care clinicians can effectively treat psychiatric disease to understanding that an integrated approach of treating psychiatric and medical disease can improve the outcomes of both. To date, guidance regarding such integration has primarily focused on reducing the potential for deleterious treatment effects by psychiatric or medically oriented interventions on other conditions. However, advances in our understanding of the central nervous system provide opportunity for greater treatment synergy using a whole-person orientation. Exploration of the biological mechanisms by which alterations in the brain at the synaptic, network, and system levels lead to psychiatric symptoms as well as cardiac, endocrine, immunologic, and other vulnerabilities will most likely lead to treatments that simultaneously target an extended range of pathologies. The move by the National Institute of Mental Health to emphasize research domains rather than only symptom-based diagnostic criteria reflects this potential, as does the increasing interaction and overlap of psychiatry and neurology. At the clinical level, those of us in primary care will continue to expand our knowledge and skill so that our patients benefit. Currently, we often consider integrated treatment of psychiatric and medical disease of particular value for “treatment-resistant” patients. In the future, we may optimize initial treatment by seeking a much broader understanding of patient vulnerabilities at the early stages of their pathologies. In the future, we may seek to not only obtain full recovery but also strive to prevent the onset of first or new episodes of illness and improve the course of comorbid medical conditions as well.
In 2011, we modified the title of PCC to The Primary Care Companion for CNS Disorders in recognition of the importance of neurology and the brain sciences and their potential to benefit patients through clinical primary care practice. Changes in the organization, financing, and consequent practice of medicine from emphasizing the processes of care delivery to focusing on outcomes and improved health status of patients provide the impetus for a true integration of psychiatric and primary care practice. Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc., and PCC will continue to provide the premier vehicle to educate medical and behavioral health professionals involved in primary care and to report new knowledge and clinical insights of relevance to them.
Our platform to provide clinicians with up-to-date information has expanded over the past 20 years, as exploration of the Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc., website demonstrates. In addition to its 2 publications and their weekly updates, the website includes the CME Institute, Neurology Knowledge (a compendium of neurology resources), Strong Veterans (resources for those caring for veterans), curated content collections, blogs, and our publisher’s podcasts. Our PCC readership benefits from features including Rounds in the General Hospital, Psychotherapy Casebook, and Rounds From Banner Alzheimer’s Institute, which bring perspective from the inpatient setting, daily practice, and a neurologic consulting service thanks to the long-term support and wisdom of Dr Theodore A. Stern, Dr Dean Schuyler, and the staff at the Banner Alzheimer’s Institute. We also are indebted to the many contributions by authors and our reviewers, who bring their insights and judgment to you from all corners of the globe. PCC is supported by an incredible professional staff—Sallie Gatlin, our managing editor, attends to the journal with finesse and tremendous professionalism.
At the start of this milestone year, I reflect on the great potential PCC provides for improving the lives of our patients and thank all who contribute in the myriad ways.
Reviewers for The Primary Care Companion
for CNS Disorders
January 1, 2017-December 31, 2017
Kolawole Adediran
Lawrence W. Adler
Cengiz Akkaya
Joseph Alcorn
Kursat Altinbas
Paul J. Ambrosini
Donna Ames
Rohul Amin
Ion Anghelescu
Godspower E. Asekomeh
Ajay Kumar Bakhla
Richard Balon
Paula Banca
David A. Baron
Salah Basheer
Menachem Ben-Ezra
Saurabh Bhardwaj
William Bograkos
Maria Böttche
Laurent Boyer
Carrie Brown
Joseph Buxbaum
William Byne
Alba Calderone
Daniel M. Campagne
Ana Maria Candil Cano
Subhajit Chakravorty
Lakshminarayana Chekuri
Peijun Chen
Henry Chung
Gabriele Cipriani
Justin Coffey
Dan Cohen
Michelle D. Colvard
George Dawson
Vishal Dhiman
David Diaz
Tyler J. Dodds
Rémy Dumas
Ken Dunham
Norma Dunn
Rodney Eiger
Arthur Elstein
Tetsuro Enomoto
Jennifer M. Erickson
Xiaoduo Fan
Mohammad Farooque
Emily Fawcett
Alexandra Flynn
Katlein Franca
Sinem Ezgi G×¼lmez
Maximilian Gahr
João Gama Marques
David S. Geldmacher
Kiki Gorbatenko-Roth
Carolyn Green
Sandeep Grover
Nitin Gupta
Souheil Hallit
Rokuro Hama
Andrea S. Hartmann
Ana Hategan
Uwe Herwig
Donald M. Hilty
Eugene Ikhimiukor
Takashi Inoue
Ana-Maria Iosif
Dan Iosifescu
Gaurav Jain
Arash Javanbakht
Jonathan A. Javitch
Priyanga Jayakumar
R. C. Jiloha
Georg Juckel
Manisha Kamat
David A. Katerndahl
Charles Kellner
Kevin Kerber
Khurshid A. Khurshid
Ashok Kumar Jainer
Katie Lomax
Yassir Mahgoub
Vladimir Maletic
Lesley Manson
Sarah M. Markowitz
Josephine Mauskopf
Muhammed Mehtar
Ä°pek Midi
Fatemeh Sadat Mirfazeli
Karen Moeller
Sahil Munjal
Louis Najarian
Subrata Naskar
Jennifer Nelson
Andres Neuhaus
Humberto Nicolini
Patrick O’ Malley
Mark A. Oldham
Ajay Parsaik
Maedeh Parvizi
Raymond Pary
Benjamin Perry
Zaheer Qureshi
Gunjan Raghuvanshi
Smitha Ramadas
Soham Rej
Sachin Relia
Patricia J. Robinson
Robert Roca
Robert Rosenheck
Katherine Sanchez
Simrat Sarai
Alan F. Schatzberg
Arjan Schröder
Daniel J. Serrani Azcurra
Bilal Shah
Vijay Shivaswamy
Sanjeev Sockalingam
Susan Solimine
Kenji Sumiya
Yutaro Suzuki
Abhishek Thandra
Melissa Thomas
Lucia Tomas-Aragones
Tara Pundiak Toohey
Akihito Uezato
Kayihan Uluc
Selene Veerman
Sumer Verma
Stephen Warnick
Glen L. Xiong
Carlos Zarate
Published online: March 1, 2018.
Prim Care Companion CNS Disord 2018;20(1):18ed02285
To cite: Culpepper L. Twenty years! Prim Care Companion CNS Disord. 2018;20(1):18ed02285.
To share: https://doi.org/10.4088/PCC.18ed02285
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