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Psychiatric News January 18, 2002
Volume 37 Number 2
© 2002 American Psychiatric Association
p. 6


Professional News

Psychiatrists Create Web Site for Psychopharmacology Algorithms

Joan Arehart-Treichel

Two psychiatrists have won an award for their Web site, which is devoted to getting physicians to use psychopharmacology algorithms.


Robert Patterson, M.D. (left), and David Osser, M.D. (right), chat with Joseph Kanter, president of the Kanter Family Foundation, shortly before receiving the foundation’s $1,000 journalism award for their Web site.

There is a Web site devoted to Harvard Medical School’s Psychopharmacology Algorithm Project. Although the site is essentially focused on getting psychiatrists to use psychopharmacology algorithms—in other words, make psychiatric-medication decisions on the basis of the strongest scientific evidence possible—the introduction to the site, "What Is the Psychopharmacology Algorithm Project at the Harvard South Shore Department of Psychiatry?," gives psychiatrists and other visitors a good overview of what the site is about.

As a result, the general editor and director of technology for the site have received a $1,000 journalism award from the Kanter Family Foundation for "telling the important story that. . .clinicians are increasingly using scientific, evidence-based information to guide their medical-treatment decisions."

The site’s general editor is David Osser, M.D., an associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and president of the Massachusetts Psychiatric Society. The director of technology is Robert Patterson, M.D., a lecturer in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.

Osser and Patterson entered their Web site into the Kanter journalism awards competition last June. As Osser wrote the Kanter Family Foundation at that time: "The Web site of our project appears to qualify for consideration on the basis of its. . .potential for stimulating greater public knowledge and understanding of the benefits of collecting and standardizing data on health outcomes so patients and clinicians can use scientific, evidence-based information to guide their treatment decisions."

Osser and Patterson received their award in October in Washington, D.C., during the "Health Legacy Partnership Conference on a National Health Outcomes Database," which was sponsored by the Kanter Family Foundation and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, which is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Both the foundation and the agency are interested in promoting scientifically based health-care decisions.

After receiving the award, Osser spoke about the international impact of the Psychopharmacology Algorithm Project Web site. He said that he and Patterson are "getting feedback from unbelievable corners of the world." Perhaps most impressive, he said, is China’s interest in the site (see box on page 6).

What the Web site really boils down to, Osser said, is that a "virtual consultant" asks a psychiatrist questions about a specific patient that the psychiatrist wants guidance on treating—say, one with depression without psychotic features. The consultant will then lead the psychiatrist to the most appropriate treatment for that patient, and evidence backing the consultant’s recommendation will also be provided.

The algorithms in the Psychopharmacology Algorithm Project are based on high-quality empirical research studies, but also on some uncontrolled studies, compilations of expert opinion, and practice guidelines derived from clinical experience (Psychiatric News, June 15, 2001).

The Web address of the Psychopharmacology Algorithm Project is www.mhc.com/Algorithms. {blacksquare}


Related Article:

China Interested in Web Site
Psychiatr News 2002 37: 6. [Full Text]




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