J
John C. Fortney
Researcher at University of Washington
Publications - 214
Citations - 8765
John C. Fortney is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 189 publications receiving 7480 citations. Previous affiliations of John C. Fortney include Duke University & University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Task-Sharing Approaches to Improve Mental Health Care in Rural and Other Low-Resource Settings: A Systematic Review.
TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review on task sharing of mental health care in rural areas of high-income countries included: PubMed, gray literature for innovations not yet published in peer-reviewed journals, and outreach to experts for additional articles.
Journal ArticleDOI
A randomized trial of telemedicine-based collaborative care for depression
John C. Fortney,Jeffrey M. Pyne,Mark J. Edlund,David K. Williams,Dean E. Robinson,Dean E. Robinson,Dinesh Mittal,Kathy L. Henderson +7 more
TL;DR: Collaborative care can be successfully adapted for primary care clinics without on-site psychiatrists using telemedicine technologies.
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A Re-conceptualization of Access for 21st Century Healthcare
John C. Fortney,James F. Burgess,James F. Burgess,Hayden B. Bosworth,Hayden B. Bosworth,Brenda M. Booth,Peter J. Kaboli +6 more
TL;DR: An overview of digital “encounterless” utilization is provided, the weaknesses of traditional conceptual frameworks of access are discussed, a new access framework is presented, recommendations for how to measure access in the new framework are provided, and future directions for research on access are discusses.
Journal ArticleDOI
Telemedicine-Based Collaborative Care for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Randomized Clinical Trial
John C. Fortney,Jeffrey M. Pyne,Timothy A. Kimbrell,Teresa J. Hudson,Dean E. Robinson,Ronald Schneider,William Mark Moore,Paul Custer,Kathleen M. Grubbs,Paula P. Schnurr +9 more
TL;DR: Telemedicine-based collaborative care can successfully engage rural veterans in evidence-based psychotherapy to improve PTSD outcomes, and the primary outcome was PTSD severity as measured by the Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale.
Journal ArticleDOI
Practice-Based Versus Telemedicine-Based Collaborative Care for Depression in Rural Federally Qualified Health Centers: A Pragmatic Randomized Comparative Effectiveness Trial
John C. Fortney,Jeffrey M. Pyne,Sip B. Mouden,Dinesh Mittal,Teresa J. Hudson,Gary W. Schroeder,David K. Williams,Carol A. Bynum,Rhonda Mattox,Kathryn Rost +9 more
TL;DR: Contracting with an off-site telemedicine-based collaborative care team can yield better outcomes than implementing practice- based collaborative care with locally available staff, according to this multisite randomized pragmatic comparative effectiveness trial.