Language
English
Publication Date
12-1-2024
Journal
Families, Systems, & Health
DOI
10.1037/fsh0000886
PMID
38497733
PMCID
PMC11967165
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
12-1-2025
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Author MSS
Abstract
Introduction: Addressing U.S. health disparities in behavioral health care requires innovative solutions to expand access beyond the traditional specialty behavioral health (BH) service model. One evidence-based strategy to increase access is task shifting, whereby tasks usually reserved for licensed clinicians are delegated to less specialized but uniquely capable health workers. Health care systems in the United States have been slow to adopt this approach, despite the widespread success of task shifting in other countries. However, two large government health care systems have employed unique task-shifting models for decades, integrating nonclinician health workers into BH settings: the Defense Health Agency (behavioral health technicians) and the Veterans Health Administration (peer specialists).
Method: This conceptual article provides overviews of these successful approaches. Challenges and opportunities, and the potential for other U.S. health care systems to adopt task shifting for behavioral health care with paraprofessionals such as community health workers (CHWs), are discussed.
Results: CHWs and other paraprofessionals are ideally situated to increase access to behavioral health care, but barriers must be overcome. Recommendations are provided based on lessons from these federal system approaches to task shifting.
Discussion: Expanding task-shifting paradigms as the Defense Health Agency and Veterans Health Administration have done may be vital to reaching more people who could benefit from BH intervention and prevention strategies. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
Keywords
Humans, United States, Health Services Accessibility, Mental Health Services, Community Health Workers, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Task Shifting
Published Open-Access
yes
Recommended Citation
Kathryn E Kanzler, Mark E Kunik, and Chase A Aycock, "Increasing Access to Behavioral Health Care: Examples of Task Shifting in Two U.S. Government Health Care Systems" (2024). Faculty and Staff Publications. 6080.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/baylor_docs/6080
Included in
Medical Sciences Commons, Medical Specialties Commons, Mental and Social Health Commons, Psychiatry and Psychology Commons