Name
Seeing in 3D: Taking the Contextual Interview to the Next Level With ACCESS-V
Description
This session is designed for all providers, including medical and behavioral health professionals, who want to enhance their contextual interviewing (CI) skills to deliver high-quality primary care by building deeper connections with patients and understanding what matters most to them. In addition to covering the core components of CI, this presentation will introduce ACCESS-V, a framework that helps clinicians integrate and organize adverse childhood experiences, culture, internal and external context, social determinants of health, and values into the clinical picture. Attendees will learn how to apply this dynamic approach through a clinical case.
Bridget Beachy David Bauman Brooke Steadman
Content Level
Intermediate
Tags
Patient-centered care or Patient perspectives, Population and public health, Workforce development
Session Type
Concurrent
SIG or Committee
Primary Care Behavioral Health (PCBH)
Objective 1
Delineate the key components of the contextual interview.
Objective 2
Delineate the key components of the ACCESS-V framework.
Objective 3
Describe how to leverage ACCESS-V information from the contextual interview via a clinical case scenario.
Content Reference 1
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine; Health and Medicine Division; Board on Health Care Services; Committee on Implementing High-Quality Primary Care, Robinson, S. K., Meisnere, M., Phillips, R. L., Jr., & McCauley, L. (Eds.). (2021). Implementing High-Quality Primary Care: Rebuilding the Foundation of Health Care. National Academies Press (US).
Content Reference 2
Robinson, P. J., Gould, D. A., & Strosahl, K. D. (2011). Real behavior change in primary care: Improving patient outcomes & increasing job satisfaction. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications, Inc.
Content Reference 3
Bauman, D., Beachy, B. & Ogbeide, S. A. (2018). Stepped care and behavioral approaches for diabetes management in integrated primary care. In W. O’Donahue & A. Maragakis (Eds), Principle-based stepped care and brief psychotherapy for integrated care settings. New York, NY: Springer Science, Business Media, LLC.
Content Reference 4
Cahill, A., Martin, M., Beachy, B., Bauman, D., & Howard-Young, J. (2024). The contextual interview: a cross-cutting patient-interviewing approach for social context. Medical education online, 29(1), 2295049. https://doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2023.2295049
Content Reference 5
Rollnick, S., Miller, W. R., & Butler, C. C. (2022). Motivational interviewing in health care: Helping patients change behavior (2nd ed.). The Guilford Press.