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Barry Sarvet
Researcher at University of Massachusetts Medical School
Publications - 38
Citations - 691
Barry Sarvet is an academic researcher from University of Massachusetts Medical School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Child and adolescent psychiatry. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 35 publications receiving 589 citations. Previous affiliations of Barry Sarvet include Tufts University & University of Massachusetts Amherst.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Improving mental health services in primary care: Reducing administrative and financial barriers to access and collaboration
TL;DR: By addressing the administrative and financial barriers that primary care clinicians and children’s mental health professionals face in providing behavioral and mental health services to children and adolescents, it is hoped to improve access, collaboration, and coordination for pediatric mental health care.
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Improving Access to Mental Health Care for Children: The Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project
Barry Sarvet,Joseph Gold,Jeff Q. Bostic,Bruce J. Masek,Jefferson B. Prince,Mary Jeffers-Terry,Charles F. Moore,Benjamin Molbert,John H. Straus +8 more
TL;DR: PCCs have used and value a statewide system that provides access to teams of psychiatric consultants and provider surveys revealed improvement in ratings of access to child psychiatry.
Journal ArticleDOI
Behavioral health care for children: the massachusetts child psychiatry access project.
John H. Straus,Barry Sarvet +1 more
TL;DR: The Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project has addressed the problem of access to behavioral health care for children by delivering telephone child psychiatry consultations and specialized care coordination support to over 95 percent of the pediatric primary care providers in Massachusetts.
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Improving perinatal depression care: the Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project for Moms.
Nancy Byatt,Kathleen Biebel,Tiffany A. Moore Simas,Barry Sarvet,Marcy Ravech,Jeroan J. Allison,John H. Straus +6 more
TL;DR: The volume of encounters, number of women served and low cost suggest that MCPAP for Moms is a feasible, acceptable and sustainable approach that can help frontline providers effectively identify and manage perinatal depression.
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Bridging the Divide Between Child Psychiatry and Primary Care: The Use of Telephone Consultation Within a Population-Based Collaborative System
TL;DR: The practice of telephone consultation within the Massachusetts Child Psychiatry Access Project is explored through the examination of case studies, demonstrating its use in common clinical scenarios.