Michael S - University of Michigan



CURRICULUM VITAE

Michael S. Klinkman, MD, MS

Professor

University of Michigan

Department of Family Medicine

1018 Fuller St.

Ann Arbor, MI 48104-1213

Tel: 734-998-7120 x309

E-mail: mklinkma@umich.edu

Table of Contents

Title and Contents Page 1

Education and Training Page 2

Certification and Licensure Page 2

Academic, Administrative, and Clinical Appointments Page 2

Research Interests Page 3

Grants Page 3

Honors and Awards Page 6

Memberships in Professional Societies Page 6

Editorial Positions, Boards, and Peer-Review Service Page 7

Teaching Page 7

Committee, Organizational, and Volunteer Service Page 9

Consulting Positions Page 12

Visiting Professorships, Seminars, and Extramural Invited Presentations Page 13

Bibliography Page 23

Education and Training

Education

09/1973 – 05/1978 B.S. (Zoology), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

06/1976 – 08/1976 University of Paris (Sorbonne), France

08/1978 – 06/1982 M.D., University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

07/1985 – 06/1987 Master of Science (Family Medicine), Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

Postgraduate Training

06/1982 – 06/1985 Family Practice Residency, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

07/1985 – 06/1987 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Fellowship in Family Medicine, Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

Certification and Licensure

Certification

1983 National Board of Medical Examiners (Diplomate)

1985 – Present American Board of Family Practice (Diplomate)

Certification 1985-1992

Recertification 1992-1999, 1999-2006, 2006-2013

Licensure

1985 – 1989 State of Ohio State Medical Board, License #51863

1989 – Present State of Michigan Medical Board, License #4101055404

Academic, Administrative, and Clinical Appointments

Academic Appointments

07/1985 – 06/1987 Clinical Instructor in Family Practice, Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

07/1987 – 09/1989 Assistant Professor, Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

09/1989 – 09/1991 Lecturer, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

09/1991 – 09/1998 Assistant Professor, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

09/1998 – 09/2010 Associate Professor, Department of Family Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

09/2001 – Present Associate Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

09/2010 – Present Professor, Department of Family Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Administrative Appointments

1984 – 1985 Chief Resident in Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

1988 – 1989 Associate Residency Director, Family Practice Residency Program, University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio

1999 – 2003 Associate Director, Medical Management Center for Managed Care, University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor Michigan

1999 – 2003 Director of Disease Management Programs, University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, Michigan

2003 – 2012 Director of Primary Care Programs, University of Michigan Depression Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan

2012 – Present Medical Director, Jackson Health Network, Jackson, Michigan

2012 – Present Co-Director, Great Lakes Research into Practice Network (GRIN)

Clinical Appointments

1987 – 1988 Health Care Team Leader, University Hospitals Family Practice, Cleveland, Ohio

Research Interests

( Mental health problems in primary care

( Development and evaluation of primary care practice support tools

( The role of information technology in primary care

( Clinical decision-making (focusing on patient perspectives and preferences)

( Developing community-based integrated care systems

Grants

Current

UL1 RR024986 Shanley-PI 06/01/12-05/31/17

NIH/NCRR

Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research (MICHR) $48,788,667 direct cost

The University of Michigan Clinical and Translational Science Award (UM CTSA) focuses on supporting and facilitating clinical and translational “team science”, and is housed in the Michigan Institute of Clinical Research (MICHR). Core programs include Biomedical Informatics, Biostatistics, Clinical Translation, Novel Methods, Technical Cores, Community Engagement, Ethics, Health Disparities, Pediatrics, and Regulatory Support. The Community Engagement program includes an outreach unit aimed at developing long-term community partnerships to carry out translational and implementation science research, while a core educational program brings together a broad spectrum from undergraduates to mid-career faculty, basic scientists to population researchers, and staff to community members.

Role: Co-Investigator – Community Engagement

Jackson Health Network Klinkman-PI 06/01/12-07/31/17

Jackson Health Network Clinical Transformation Initiative $187,725 direct cost

This long-term consultation agreement supports work with the Jackson Health Network to lead development of a clinical care model and health IT platform to support the creation of a community-wide clinical network that integrates medical, behavioral, and social services across the full spectrum of care.

UL1 RR024986 Klinkman-PI 05/01/15-04/30/16

NIH/NCRR/Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research (MICHR)

MICHR Big Ideas Innovative Research Program Award $90,052 direct cost

Clinician and Patient Experience of Care in the Community

This project will conduct a series of qualitative, semi-structured interviews of persons currently receiving care in the Jackson community for a wide range of health problems and a parallel series of qualitative interviews with health care providers and key community stakeholders. These interviews will provide a rich source of data to enable better understanding of the personal and social context in which care occurs, to understand the most important issues facing community members experiencing health care, and to identify the most important areas to monitor and assess in evaluating the successes or failures of practice transformation over time.

894805/572950, Klinkman-PI 11/01/15-10/31/16

DHHS–Medicaid/Michigan Department of Community Health $191,170 direct cost

"Reverse Referrals" and Specialty-Based Behavioral Health Care Management

We will support specialty mental health care and improve care transitions between primary and specialty care by implementing a ‘reverse referral’ pathway to provide behavioral health care manager support to patients who are being returned to primary care after a course of treatment in specialty care. With this extension we hope to enhance patients’ return to primary care and increase the capacity of specialty mental health to accept new referrals.

Pending

None

Completed Grant Summary

1989 – 1991 Federal Residency Training Grant Application ($100,000)

The Development and Implementation of a Quality Assurance/Medical Decision-Making Curriculum for Residency Training

1991 – 1992 Michigan Health Care Education and Research Foundation ($27,701)

Clinical Decision-Making and the Use of Medical Resources for Episodes of Chest Pain in Primary Care

1992 – 1994 Michigan Department of Social Services ($1,182,258)

Modified Physician Sponsor Plan in Washtenaw County

1996 – 1997 Michigan Blue Cross/Blue Shield Foundation ($10,000)

Collaborative Care of Depression in the Community

1999 – 2001 University of Michigan Health System Academic Venture Fund ($289,778)

Using the Centralized Mental Health Interview to Identify Patients At-Risk for High Utilization

2000 – 2001 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality ($74,698)

Great Lakes Research into Practice Network (GRIN)

2002 – 2003 University of Michigan ($20,000)

Collaborative Health Services Research for Practice Improvements Initiative: Computer-Prompted Active Depression Management in Primary Care

2003 – 2003 Merck Disease Management Program ($20,000)

Feasibility of Depression Disease Management in Primary Care

2003 – 2006 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation ($99,721)

Depression in Primary Care Initiative: Integrated Depression Management in Primary Care

2004 – 2006 Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation (796.PIRAP) ($10,000)

The Value of Quality Indicators in Primary Care Practice: A Survey of Michigan Primary Physicians

2001 – 2006 National Institute of Mental Health/NIH ($900,000)

Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D)

2002 – 2007 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (5 D12 HP00134-02) ($482,179)

Academic Administrative Units in Primary Care: Development of an Episode-Oriented Clinical Information System

2003 – 2005 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation ($549,863)

Depression in Primary Care Initiative: Integrated Depression Management in Primary Care

2004 – 2007 National Institute of Mental Health/NIH ($906,398)

Michigan Clinical Research Collaborative (MCRC) Project

2005 – 2006 Eli Lilly Foundation (05-4975) ($268,443)

Development and Validation of Remission Tool

2005 – 2009 Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan (05-0587) ($99,510)

“Secondary Screening” For Comorbid Mental Health Problems In Depressed Primary Care Patients

2006 – 2010 Eli Lilly Foundation ($975,000)

The University of Michigan Depression Center: Reengineering the Nation’s Primary Care Depression Network

2007 – 2009 Wyeth ($550,000)

Using Electronic Medical Records (EHR)-Based Disease Management Tools to Improve Management of Depression in Ambulatory Care

2007 – 2010 MICHR ($50,000)

Greater Flint in Primary Care Partnership

2007 – 2010 National Institutes of Mental Health 1R21MH082165-01 ($226,528) Greater Flint Depression in Primary Care Partnership

2009 – 2010 MICHR/CTSA ($25,000)

Pilot Test of Behavioral Intervention to Increase Antidepressant Adherence

2009 – 2010 Ethel & James Flinn Foundation ($200,000)

Enhancing the Sustainability of Depression Disease Management Support For Primary Care

2011 – 2012 Ethel & James Flinn Foundation ($46,000)

Depression Disease Management in the Community Primary Care Setting

2011 – 2015 DHHS–Medicaid/Michigan Department of Community Health ($1,716,933)

Integrated Care for Medicaid Consumers with Behavioral Health Care Needs

2015 – 2016 NIH/NCRR/Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research (MICHR)

MICHR Big Ideas Innovative Research Program Award ($90,052)

Clinician and Patient Experience of Care in the Community

Honors and Awards

1973 Regents Alumni Scholar, University of Michigan

1973 – 1977 National Merit Scholar, University of Michigan

1974 – 1978 James B. Angell Scholar, University of Michigan

1977 Phi Beta Kappa

1987 – 1988 Kenneth G. Reeb Award for Excellence in Clinical Teaching, Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University

1991 – 1992 Faculty Appreciation Senior Resident Award, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School (outstanding clinical teacher award)

1994 – 1995 Faculty Appreciation Senior Resident Award, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School (outstanding clinical teacher award)

1998 Volunteer Physician of the Year, Hope Medical Clinic, Ypsilanti, Michigan

2005 – 2008 Graham Center Scholar, The Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care

2009 – Present Best Doctors in America

Memberships in Professional Societies

1985 – Present NAPCRG (North American Primary Care Research Group)

1990 – 1995: Chair, Microcomputer Working Group

1996 – 1998: Co-Chair, Task Force on Mental Health Problems in Primary Care

1993 – Present: Working Group on International Classification of Primary Care

1998 – Present: Chair, Working Group on Mental Health Problems in Primary Care

2006 – Present: Health Information Technology Subcommittee, Committee on Advancing the Science of Family Medicine

1985 – Present Society of Teachers of Family Medicine

1989 – 1999;

2007 – Present Michigan Academy of Family Physicians

1989 – 1999;

2007 – Present American Academy of Family Physicians

1993 – Present WONCA (World Organization of Family Doctors) International Classification Committee

1993 – 1994: Core Working Group, International Classification of Primary Care Revision

1998 – 2005: Lead, Process Measurement Working Group, International Classification of Primary Care Revision

2005 – 2007 Co-Chair, WONCA International Classification Committee

2007 – Present Chair, WONCA International Classification Committee

Editorial Positions, Boards, and Peer-Review Service

Editorial Boards

2002 – 2008 Member, Editorial Advisory Board, Depression Center Newsletter, University of Michigan Depression Center

2007 – Present Member, Editorial Board, Primary Care Companion to Journal of Clinical Psychiatry

2008 – Present Member, Editorial Board, Mental Health in Family Medicine

2011 – Present Member, Editorial Board, International Journal of Person-Centered Medicine

Peer Review Service

1985 – Present Scientific Reviewer, North American Primary Care Research Group Annual Meeting (NAPCRG)

1990 – Present Family Medicine

1992 – 2000 Journal of Family Practice

1994 Western Journal of Medicine

1997 – 2001 Journal of General Internal Medicine

1999 – Present General Hospital Psychiatry

1999 – Present International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine

2004 – Present Journal of the American Board of Family Practice (Medicine)

2006 – Present Journal of Clinical Psychiatry

2006 – 2007 Archives of Family Medicine

External Grant Review Service

2000 Health Research Council of New Zealand

NIH Study Section Service

2002 – 2006 National Institute of Mental Health, Special Emphasis Panel ZMH1 ITV-D [Interventions Review Committee] grant review committee

2006 NIMH study section, ITMA [Interventions for Adult Mood and Anxiety Disorders] grant review committee

Teaching

Students (trainees, direct supervision)

Primary Mentor, Resident Original Projects

1996 Melissa Sokol, MD

1999. Amy Ullrich, MD

2000. Matthew Moore, MD

2009 Joshua Smith, MD (co-primary mentor with Don Nease, MD)

2012 Jacob Bryan, MD, Michelle Tortorello, MD

Primary Mentor and Other

1992 – 1994 Tami Ritsema, MPH. Supervisor of field placement/clinical coursework in MPH Program at University of Michigan School of Public Health

2003 – 2005 Nicholas Emptage, MPH. Co-Supervisor of field placement/work-study in PhD Program at University of Michigan School of Public Health

2009 – 2012 Christine Cigolle, MD, MPH. Research mentor on NIH K08 Career Development Award proposal

2009 – Present Research mentor, University of Michigan Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program (UROP)

Intramural Lectures/Courses

1995 – 1998 OB Theme Days: Core Obstetrical Curriculum, University of Michigan Department of Family Practice. Taught several didactic sessions on shoulder dystocia, augmentation of labor, episiotomy repair

1995 – 2004 Practice Management curriculum, University of Michigan Department of Family Medicine. Several lectures on billing, documentation, HEDIS and other quality assessment measures

1990 – 2002 Pediatrics curriculum, University of Michigan, Department of Family Medicine, Several lectures on well-child care and developmental assessment

Teaching Activities, other

1983 – 1985 Preceptor, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School, Taught in Physical Diagnosis Course for Medical Students

1985 – 1989 Instructor, Case Western University Medical School Family Clinic Program, Taught Interviewing and Patient Care Skills in Longitudinal Patient-based Curriculum

1985 – 1989 Preceptor, Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University

1986 – 1987 Instructor, Family Life Cycle Course, Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Four half-day sessions for residents in department-affiliated programs

1987 – 1989 Advisor for Residents, Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University

1987 – 1989 Preceptor/Instructor, Case Western Reserve University, Case-Oriented Problem Solving Course for Second-year Medical Students

1988 – 1989 Lead, Internal Curriculum Revision Group, Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University [curriculum development]

1989 – 1994 Instructor, Inteflex Physical Diagnosis Course

1989 – 1996 Attending Physician, University Family Practice Clinical Teaching Service (Obstetrics/Newborn) 1-2 weeks/year

1989 – Present Preceptor, Medical Students and Residents, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School

1989 – 2004 Attending Physician, Chelsea Family Practice Inpatient Medicine Clinical Teaching Service, 6 weeks/year

1990 – Present Preclinical Advisor for Medical Students at University of Michigan Medical School (intermittent)

2012 Guest Lecturer. Health care reform and its impact on primary health care: University of Michigan School of Social Work, SSW 663

2012 – 2013 Lecture/Podcast, Behavioral Health Integration and care management. Certificate Program in Care Management, University of Michigan School of Social Work

Committee, Organizational, and Volunteer Service

Institutional

1984 – 1985 Member, Residency Recruitment Committee, University of Michigan Department of Family Practice

1984 – 1985 Member, Curriculum Committee, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Department of Family Practice

1984 – 1985 Member, Medical Records Committee, University of Michigan Department of Family Practice

1988 - 1989 Chair, Quality Assurance Committee, Department of Family Medicine, University Hospitals, Cleveland, Ohio

1989 – 2008 Member, Information Systems Group [various names for Clinical IT core leadership group], Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School

1990 – 1993 Chair, Quality Management Committee, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School

1990 – 1993 Departmental Liaison and Member, Hospital Quality Management Committee, University of Michigan Hospitals

1993 – 1998 Member, Continuous Quality Improvement Steering Committee, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School

1993 – 1996 Member, Advisory Committee on Promotions and Tenure, Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School

1995 Member, Dean’s Task Force on Health Services Research, University of Michigan Medical Center

1995 – 1996 Member, Physicians Information Group, University of Michigan Medical Center

1997 – 1998 Member, Steering Committee, Washtenaw County Community Mental Health/UMMC Department of Psychiatry Integrated Health Care Project

1997 – 1999 Member, Primary Care Committee, Washtenaw County Community Mental Health/UMMC Department of Psychiatry Integrated Health Care Project

1997 – 1999 Member, Continuous Quality Improvement Committee, Michigan Center for Diagnosis and Referral (M-CDR), University of Michigan Department of Psychiatry

1998 – 2003 Steering Committee, Medical Management Center for Managed Care, University of Michigan Health System

1998 – 2000 Member, ActiveCare Planning Committee (central planning/design committee for new GM health insurance plan), University of Michigan Health System

1999 – 2000 Member, Search Committee, Director of Health Services Research Laboratory and Director of Clinical Practice Management/Systems Support Program, University of Michigan Health System

1999 – 2001 Member, Clinical Data Repository Steering Committee, University of Michigan Health System

1999 – 2003 Associate Director, Medical Management Center, University of Michigan Health System

1999 – 2003 Director, Disease Management Programs, University of Michigan Health System

2000 – 2002 Member, Electronic Problem Summary List Steering Committee, University of Michigan Health System

2000 – 2001 Member, Faculty Group Practice Managed Care Committee, University of Michigan Health System

2001 – 2005 Member, Medical Informatics Advisory Committee, University of Michigan Health System

2001 – Present Steering Committee, University of Michigan Depression Center

2003 – 2008 Executive Council, University of Michigan Depression Center

2009 – 2010 Member, Coded Diagnosis Task Force, University of Michigan Health System

2010 – 2011 Co-chair, Chronic Care Model Task Force, University of Michigan Department of Family Medicine

2013 Lead, Collaborative Care Task Group, University of Michigan Depression Center

2014 – present Member, Community Engagement Leadership team, MICHR

2015 – present Member, UMHS Behavioral Health Integrated Care Task Force

Regional

1987 – 1989 Member, Physician Advisory Board, CIGNA Health Plan of Northeast Ohio

1992 – 1995 Steering Committee, Washtenaw County Medicaid Managed Care Demonstration Project

1995 – 2000 Steering Committee, Michigan Research Network (MIRNET)

1998 Member, Health Plan Design Committee, Partnership Health, University of Michigan Health System and Ford Motor Company

1998 – 1999 Member, Operations Council, Washtenaw Integrated Health Care Project

1999 – 2000 Member, Evidence-Based Medicine Task Force, DaimlerChrysler Corporation

2000 – 2001 Co-Director of Research, Washtenaw Integrated Health Project

2000 – 2004 Steering Committee, Great Lakes Research into Practice Network (GRIN)

2006 – 2010 Co-founder and Community Steering Committee member, Greater Flint Depression in Primary Care Partnership

2009 – Present Co-founder and medical lead, Allegiance Depression Care Management program, Jackson, MI

2011 – Present Co-founder, LifeWays Integrated Network of Care program (LINC), Hillsdale County, MI

2012 – Present Medical Director, Jackson Health Network

2012 – Present Co-Director, Great Lakes Research into Practice Network (GRIN)

National

1996 – 1998 Co-Chair, Task Force on Mental Health Problems in Primary Care, North American Primary Care Research Group

1998 Chair, Working Group on Mental Health Problems in Primary Care, North American Primary Care Working Group

1997 – 1998 Member, Scientific Advisory Committee, MacArthur Foundation Task Force on Depression in Primary Care

2000 Member, External Advisory Committee, “Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression” (STAR*D) Study, National Institute of Mental Health Contract Grant #N01MH90003

2002 Executive Committee, “Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression” (STAR*D) Study, National Institute of Mental Health contract grant #N01MH90003

2003 – 2006 Communications (Publications) Committee, “Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression” (STAR*D) Study, National Institute of Mental Health contract grant #N01MH90003

2005 – 2007 Board Member, National Alliance for Primary Care Informatics [committee of American Medical Informatics Association]

2006 – 2008 Medications Management Subcommittee, ASCEND Clinical Trial

2006 – 2007 Member, Future of Family Medicine Task Force, North American Primary Care Research Group

2006 – Present Member, Health Information Technology Task Force, American Academy of Family Physicians and North American Primary Care Research Group

2007 – 2010 Member, Advisory Board, Depression (AMA-sponsored initiative to provide Web-based educational materials and educational outreach to primary care)

2007 – 2008 Expert Witness on Primary Care Data Standards, National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics Subcommittee on Populations

2010 – 2012 Chair, Technical Expert Panel, “Mental Health and Health IT: The Way Forward": co-sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the National Institute of Mental Health

2012 – Present Member, Advisory Board, eNQUIRENet

2014 Expert Panel member, Primary Care Behavioral Health Integration Payment, MedPAC

2014 – Present Member, Committee to Advance the Science of Family Medicine (CASFM) Health Information Technology Task Force

International

1993 – Present WONCA (World Organization of Family Doctors) International Classification Committee

1993 – 1994: Core Working Group, International Classification of Primary Care Revision

1998 – 2005: Lead, Process Measurement Working Group, International Classification of Primary Care Revision

2004 – Present Member, SNOMED-CT Primary Care Working Group: now the International General Practice/Family Practice Special Interest Group of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organization

2005 – 2007 Co-Chair, WONCA (World Organization of Family Doctors) International Classification Committee

2006 – Present Member, World Health Organization (WHO) International Advisory Group on the Revision of ICD-10 Mental and Behavioural Disorders

2007 – Present Chair, WONCA (World Organization of Family Doctors) International Classification Committee

2008 – 2012 Member, Person-Centered Medicine initiative, World Psychiatric Association

2010 – 2014 Deputy Chair (to Sir David Goldberg), World Health Organization (WHO) Task Force on creation of ICD-11-PHC for mental and behavioural disorders

Volunteer Service (community and humanitarian)

1985 – 1989 Volunteer Physician, Free Clinic of Cleveland

1987 – 1989 Leader, Community Fellowship Group, The Chapel, Solon, Ohio

1989 – 2004 Volunteer Physician, Hope Medical Clinic, Ypsilanti, Michigan

1996 – 2004 Coach/assistant coach, various community youth baseball programs

2000 – Present Sunday school teacher (youth program, adult Sunday School), Huron Hills Church, Ann Arbor, Michigan

2006 – 2012 Church Board, Huron Hills Church, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Consulting Positions

1987 – 1991 Information Systems Consultant, Queen Charlotte Island Health Care Society, Queen Charlotte City, British Columbia, Canada

1991 Information Systems Consultant, Department of Family Medicine, SUNY-Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York

1992 – 1994 Consultant on Primary Care Classification Systems, Foster Child Health Passport Database Project, Healthway Systems, Menlo Park, California

1996 – 1997 Consultant on Primary Care Classification/Clinical Information Systems, Department of Family Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, Texas

1997 – 1998 Information Systems Consultant, A4 Health Systems, Cary, North Carolina

2002 Consultant, Forrest Laboratories, New York, New York

2005 – 2009 Member, Depression and Anxiety Clinical Consultant Board, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, Collegeville, Pennsylvania

2006 – 2011 Member, Medical Advisory Board, Cielo Med Solutions LLC, Ann Arbor, Michigan

2008 – 2010 Consultant, University of North Carolina Developing Evidence to Inform Decisions about Effectiveness Center (DEcIDE Center)

2008 – 2010 Consultant, GE/Centricity Electronic Health Record project: Using an EMR-Based Intervention to Improve Screening and Diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder in Primary Care

Visiting Professorships, Seminars, and Extramural Invited Presentations

Visiting Professorships

1987 Guest Faculty, Clinical Research Workshop for Family Physicians, Sponsored by American Academy of Family Physicians, North American Primary Care Research Group, Minneapolis, Minnesota

1994 Visiting Faculty, “International Classification of Primary Care – Towards Management of Episodes in Primary Health care.” (Finnish National Training Session in use of ICPC) Helsinki, Finland

1996 Visiting Scholar/Medical Informatics Consultant, University of South Alabama Department of Family Practice, Mobile, Alabama

2000 Visiting Scholar, University of Colorado Department of Family Medicine, Denver, Colorado

2002 Visiting Scholar, George Warren Brown School of Social Work, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri

2003 Visiting Professor, Department of Community Medicine and General Practice, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway

2003 Visiting Professor, Department of General Practice, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark

2005 – 2008 Graham Center Scholar, The Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, Washington, DC

2014 – Present Visiting Scholar/consultant, Clinical transformation/health information technology development, University of Colorado Department of Family Medicine

Intramural Invited Presentations (CME courses, invited lectures)

1. Klinkman MS, March 1991, Quality assurance and mmedical outcomes. Spring Family Practice Review Course, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

2. Klinkman MS, September 1995, Preventing what? Health maintenance for the elderly. Managing the Health of Populations, Biennial Alumni Institute, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, Michigan

3. Klinkman MS, June 2000, Treatment of depression in the Primary Care setting. Depression Over The Life Cycle Course, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

4. Klinkman MS, Green LA, March 2001, ClinfoTracker: A prompt/reminder system for primary care. Clinical Informatics: What You Need to Know Course. University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

5. Klinkman MS, March 2001, Chest Pain in Primary Care. Spring Family Practice Review Course, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

6. Klinkman MS, August 2001, STAR*D – the next step in guideline development. Presented to: University of Michigan Department of Psychiatry Depression Center Kickoff, Ann Arbor, Michigan

7. Klinkman MS, October 2001, Managing depression: Common recommendations across guidelines. Practical Approaches to Managing Depression in Primary Care Practice course, University of Michigan Medical School, Dearborn, Michigan

8. Klinkman MS, October 2001, Practical office systems to help manage depression. Practical Approaches to Managing Depression in Primary Care Practice course, University of Michigan Medical School, Dearborn, Michigan

9. Klinkman MS, May 2004. Integrating depression treatment into primary care: What works, what doesn’t, and what we don’t yet know. Invited Plenary, Dean’s Health Services Research Symposium series, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

10. Klinkman MS, September 2004. Screening and primary care outreach programs. Plenary Presentation, University of Michigan Depression Center Scientific Advisory Board, Ann Arbor, Michigan

11. Klinkman MS, Athey BD. June 2005, Multifaceted Clinical Decisions: A clinical decision support system dilemma in the treatment of depression in primary care. Poster Presentation, 16th Annual Albert J. Silverman Research Conference: Advances in Psychosomatic Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Department of Psychiatry, Ann Arbor, Michigan

12. Klinkman MS, Nease DE Jr, Green LA. June 2005. An update on ClinfoTracker. Department of Family Medicine Grand Rounds, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

13. Klinkman MS, Grazier K, Emptage N, Kerber K, Kuebler, J Avripas S, Adman T. December 2005. First results from the Depression in Primary Care demonstration project: Lessons learned. University of Michigan Department of Psychiatry Research Conference, Ann Arbor, Michigan

14. Klinkman MS, January 2008. M-DOCC update: Primary and specialty care outcomes. University of Michigan, Rachel Upjohn Depression Center Roundtable, Ann Arbor, Michigan

15. Klinkman MS, July 2008. First clinical results from the M-DOCC program: 2003-2008. Department of Family Medicine Grand Rounds, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

16. Klinkman MS, Kerber K. November 2008. M-DOCC: Michigan Depression Outreach and Collaborative Care program. M-Healthy Benefits Committee, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

17. Bauroth, SA, Smith K, Lazar P, Torres T, Burnett M, Lewis EY, Ackerman M, Mirel B, Klinkman MS. May 2009. Greater Flint Depression in Primary Care Partnership: Initial Products. Poster Presentation, First Community Conference, Michigan Center for Health Research (MICH-R), Ann Arbor, Michigan

18. Klinkman MS. October 1, 2014. GRIN, Practice-based research, and community engagement. Invited presentation, MICHR External Review Committee.

19. Klinkman MS, Schultz A, Thoune R. October 14, 2014. PBRN to CBRN: from Practice-Based Research Network to Community-Based Research Network. Presented at: Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research Annual Symposium on Community Engagement.

Extramural Invited Presentations

1. Klinkman MS, December 1985, Health care economics in the 1980s: Effects on the health care delivery system. Graduate School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

2. Klinkman MS, May 1986, Referrals to an academic family counseling service: Effect of role modeling on resident behavior. 19th Annual Spring Conference, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine, San Diego, California

3. Kelly RE, Klinkman MS, December 1986, A primer on interpretable research designs. 1st Annual Conference on Primary Care Research Methods and Statistics, San Antonio, Texas

4. Klinkman MS, February 1987, Community medicine in the grand sense: The changing health care system and family medicine. Department of Family and Community Medicine, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, Virginia

5. Klinkman MS, February 1987, Health care economics in the 1980s: Effects on family practice residency training, Department of Family Medicine, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

6. Klinkman MS, Garrett RE, March 1987, Paradoxical teaching: A new approach to teaching family systems to residents. STFM Family in Family Medicine Conference, Amelia Island, Florida

7. Klinkman MS, April 1987. The involvement of Family Medicine residency programs with prepaid health care. Annual Meeting, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM) Working Group on Cost Effectiveness, New Orleans, Louisiana

8. Galazka S, Klinkman MS, April 1987, Integrating prepaid health care into the academic Family Practice Center: Balancing cost containment, education and quality of care. 20th Annual Spring Conference, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM), New Orleans, Louisiana

9. Klinkman MS, Kelly RE, May 1987, Research design issues in primary care. AAFP/ NAPCRG Clinical Research Workshop for Family Physicians, Minneapolis, Minnesota

10. Klinkman MS, May 1987, Decision-making in an uncertain age: Responses of family practice leaders to a changing medical environment. 15th Annual Meeting North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Minneapolis, Minnesota

11. Klinkman MS, April 1988, Clinical competence in Family Medicine. 21st Annual Spring Conference, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM), Baltimore, Maryland

12. Klinkman MS, Alemagno SA, May 1988, The choice of caregiver: Cost, convenience or quality? 16th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

13. Klinkman MS, May 1988, Outcome measurement in primary care research. Plenary Presentation, 16th Annual Meeting North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

14. Klinkman MS, Alemagno SA, Stange KC, April 1989, Methodologic issues in health services research: I. The choice of caregiver. 17th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), San Antonio, Texas

15. Klinkman MS, May 1989, Research in the choice of health care provider. Department of Family Practice, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

16. Klinkman MS, Green LA, May 1990, Development of a microcomputer-based research-oriented information system for a primary care office. 18th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Denver, Colorado

17. Klinkman MS, Green LA, January 1991, Examining the process of primary care: Linking the reason for encounter to resource utilization and diagnosis in a microcomputer-based information system. Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, 2nd Annual Primary Care Research Conference, San Diego, California

18. Klinkman MS, Green LA, May 1991, Examining the process of primary care. 24th Annual Spring Conference, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

19. Klinkman MS, Green LA, May 1991, Examining the process of primary care: Using ICPC in a microcomputer-based information system. Research Presentation, 19th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Quebec City, Quebec, Canada

20. Klinkman MS, May 1991, Outcome measurement issues in primary care. Plenary Presentation, Clinical Outcomes and Effectiveness Theme Day, 24th Annual Spring Conference, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

21. Klinkman MS, Green LA, April 1992, Using a primary care information system in the performance of primary care research. 20th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Richmond, Virginia

22. Zazove P, Klinkman MS, Mehr DR, Ruffin MT, April 1992, A criterion-based review of preventive health care in the elderly. 25th Annual Spring Conference, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM), St. Louis, Missouri

23. Klinkman MS, January 1993, Using ICPC to construct episodes of care in a Primary Care Practice. WONCA (World Organization of Family Doctors) Classification Committee, Madrid, Spain

24. Klinkman MS, June 1993, Nailing Jell-O to the wall: Psychosocial episodes in primary care. WONCA/SIMG Congress, Quality of Care in Family Medicine/General Practice, Hague, Netherlands

25. Klinkman MS, Gorenflo DG, October 1993, Using episodes of care to test a model of clinical decision making in primary care. 15th Annual Meeting, Society for Medical Decision Making, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina

26. Klinkman MS, Stevens D, Gorenflo DW, November 1993, Clinical decision-making in episodes of care for chest pain: A MIRNET study. Plenary Session, 21st Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), San Diego, California

27. Klinkman MS, February 1994, Development of an automated data source to construct ambulatory care episodes. National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, Subcommittee on Medical Classification Systems, Washington, District of Columbia

28. Klinkman MS, June 1994, ICPC as a tool for management and training. Plenary Session, Finnish National Training Session in ICPC. Helsinki, Finland

29. Klinkman MS, July 1994, Using ICPC in an episode-oriented primary care database. National Institute of Mental Health: Workshop on Defining Mental Health Problems in Primary Care. Washington, District of Columbia

30. Klinkman MS, October 1994, Episodes of care for abdominal pain in a primary care practice. 22nd Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Toronto, Ontario, Canada

31. Klinkman MS, Gorenflo DW, October 1994, “Hidden” inter provider variation in resource use during episodes of care for abdominal pain. October 1994. 16th Annual Meeting, Society for Medical Decision Making, Cleveland, Ohio

32. Klinkman MS, March 1995, The problem with (chest) pain: Clinical decision making in primary care. Grand Rounds, Department of Internal Medicine, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Ann Arbor, Michigan

33. Klinkman MS, September 1995, Competing demands in psychosocial care: A model for the identification and management of depressive disorders in primary care. National Institute of Mental Health: Mental Health Services Research Conference, Bethesda, Maryland

34. Klinkman MS, November 1995, Using ICPC in a partially-computerized primary care clinical information system. Plenary Session, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research Primary Care Informatics Standards Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana

35. Klinkman MS, Gorenflo DW, Ritsema TA, November 1995, The quality of prenatal care in Medicaid, fee-for-service, and managed health care settings. 23rd Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Houston, Texas

36. Nutting P, Gilbert T, Gjeltema K, Klinkman MS, Stange K, Wasserman M, November 1995, Practice-based research methods: The challenge of patient followup. 23rd Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Houston, Texas

37. Klinkman MS, March 1996, Validity and reliability of episode recording using ICPC in a primary care clinical information system. Department of General Practice, Odense University, Odense, Denmark

38. Klinkman MS, March 1996, ICPC and episodes of care in the primary care setting. Workshop on Classification in Primary Care, Danish College of General Practitioners, Odense, Denmark

39. Zazove P, Klinkman MS, April 1996, Implementation of a continuous quality improvement program in an academic family practice department. 29th Annual Meeting, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM), San Francisco, California

40. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC, Gallo SM, Schwenk TL, July 996, The problem of “false positives” in primary care physician detection of depression: Can screening instruments help? National Institute of Mental Health; 10th International Conference on Mental Health Problems in the General Health Care Sector, Bethesda, Maryland

41. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC, Gallo SM, Schwenk TL, November 1996, “False positives,” “false negatives” and the validity of the structured clinical interview for depression in Primary Care. 24th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

42. Zazove P, Klinkman MS, May 1997, A continuous quality improvement program in an academic family practice department: One year later. 30th Annual Meeting, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM), Boston, Massachusetts

43. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC, September 1997, Undetected depression is not untreated depression: A report from the Michigan Depression Project. National Institute of Mental Health; 11th International Conference on Mental Health Problems in the General Health Care Sector. Bethesda, Maryland

44. Okkes IM, Lamberts H, Klinkman MS, November 1997, Forum on mental health problems in Primary Care. 25th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Orlando, Florida

45. Klinkman MS, Okkes IM, November 1998, Mental health problems in Primary Care: A research agenda. 26th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Orlando, Florida

46. Klinkman MS, Valenstein MV, Becker S, November 1998, Collaborative care for depressed patients in the community. 26th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Orlando, Florida

47. Klinkman MS, Nease DE, November 1998, Classifying mental health problems in Primary Care: Forum of the NAPCRG Task Force on mental health problems in Primary Care. 26th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Orlando, Florida

48. Klinkman MS, February 1999, Old and new guidelines for managing hyperlipidemia. 23rd Annual Midwinter Family Practice Update, Harbor Springs, Michigan

49. Klinkman MS, February 1999, Effective well-child care: More then immunization rates. 23rd Annual Midwinter Family Practice Update, Harbor Springs, Michigan

50. Klinkman MS, February 1999, Chest pain in office practice. 23rd Annual Midwinter Family Practice Update, Harbor Springs, Michigan

51. Klinkman MS, April 1999, Management of depression by primary care physicians: Practical issues of care. Clinical Roundtable, American Journal of Managed Care, Scottsdale, Arizona

52. Nease DE, Klinkman MS, Volk RJ, July 1999, Improving the accuracy of mood disorder screening through use of a severity measure. 12th NIMH International Conference on Mental Health Problems in the General Health Care Sector. Washington, DC

53. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC, July 1999, Treatment intensity in "detected" and "undetected" depressed primary care patients: A report from the Michigan Depression Project. 12th NIMH International Conference on Mental Health Problems in the General Health Care Sector. Washington, DC

54. Nease DE, Klinkman MS, Volk RJ, November 1999, Decreasing false-positive rates in depression screening with a symptom severity measure. 27th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), San Diego, California

55. Okkes IM, Klinkman MS, Nease DE, Lamberts H, November 1999, Forum of the NAPCRG Task Force on mental health problems in Primary Care: The relationship between somatic symptoms and mood disorders. 27th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), San Diego, California

56. Klinkman MS, December 1999, Deconstructing depression: What we've learned from the Michigan Depression Project. Department of Family Practice, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, Ohio

57. Klinkman MS, June 2000, The changing landscape of depression in primary care. Plenary Presentation, Recognition and Treatment of Depression in Primary Care Course; Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, Ohio

58. Klinkman MS, September 2000, Classifying the process of Primary Care. Meeting, WONCA (World Organization of Family Doctors) International Classification Committee, Strunjan, Slovenia

59. Okkes IM, Klinkman MS, Nease DE, Lamberts H, November 2000, Forum of the NAPCRG Task Force on Mental Health Problems in Primary Care: Works in progress. 28th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Amelia Island, Florida

60. Klinkman MS, December 2000, ClinfoTracker: A clinical prompt/reminder system based on ICPC. Presented at: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Practice-Based Research Networks Meeting, Rockville, Maryland

61. Klinkman MS, December 2000, Beyond ICD-9: An introduction to the use of the international classification of Primary Care in PBRN. Presented at: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Practice-Based Research Networks Meeting. Rockville, Maryland.

62. Klinkman MS, April 2001, STAR*D and treatment of depressive disorder in Primary Care. Presented to: Heritage Foundation, Ann Arbor, Michigan

63. Wood M, Lamberts H, Klinkman MS, October 2001, Longitudinal data collection in primary care. Workshop Presentation. 29th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

64. Nease DE, Klinkman MS, October 2001, Successful prompting for treatment of depressed patients using severity and DSM criteria. 29th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

65. Klinkman MS, Nease DE, Okkes IM, Lamberts H, October 2001, The Eighth Forum of the NAPCRG Task Force on Mental Health Problems in Primary Care: New Opportunities for Collaboration. 29th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

66. Klinkman MS, November 2001, Longitudinal Data Collection in Primary Care Research. Conference on Practice-Based Research, San Antonio, Texas

67. Aikens JE, Nease DE, Klinkman MS, Schwenk T, Rodgers P, October 2002, Personal models of depression account for antidepressant adherence. 30th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), New Orleans, Louisiana

68. Klinkman MS, March 2003, “Metasodes:” clustered comorbidity and why it matters. University of Western Ontario, Department of Family Medicine. London, Ontario

69. Klinkman MS, March 2003, Going beyond the office walls: Working with “outside” data in primary care. University of Western Ontario, Department of Family Medicine. London, Ontario, Canada

70. Klinkman MS, May 2003, Electronic records in U.S. Primary Care. Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Community Medicine and General Practice. Trondheim, Norway

71. Klinkman MS, May 2003, The episode of care in electronic patient records. Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Medical Informatics. Trondheim, Norway

72. Klinkman MS, May 2003, How detailed should our episodes be? International Conference on Episode of Care Recording in Primary Care. Middelfart, Denmark

73. Klinkman MS, May 2003, “Metasodes:” Clustered comorbidity and how it affects episodes of care. International Conference on Episode of Care Recording in Primary Care. Middelfart, Denmark

74. Klinkman MS, May 2003, Implementation of ICPC in a computerized prompt and reminder system. International Conference on Episode of Care Recording in Primary Care. Middelfart, Denmark

75. Klinkman MS, May 2003, Episodes of Care and Clinical Decision-Making in Primary Care/General Practice. International Conference on Episode of Care Recording in Primary Care. Department of General Practice, University of Southern Denmark. Odense, Denmark

76. Klinkman MS, May 2003, Clinical decision support using a computerized prompt and reminder system. Grand Rounds, Department of General Practice, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark

77. Nease DE Jr, Aikens JE, Gorenflo DW, Klinkman MS, October 2003, Community St. John’s Wort use: Motivations, depression severity and risk, 31st Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Banff, Alberta, Canada

78. Klinkman MS, August 2004. Incorporating process coding into ICPC-2. Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Community Medicine and General Practice. Trondheim, Norway. Held in conjunction with WONCA (World Organization of Family Doctors) International Classification Committee meeting, Trondheim, Norway

79. Klinkman MS, November 2004. Initial results from the Integrated Depression Management in Primary Care demonstration. Annual Meeting, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Depression in Primary Care Initiative, Huntington Beach, California

80. Klinkman MS. February 2005, Data standards for the new model of family medicine. Invited Plenary, Association of Departments of Family Medicine Annual Chairs’ Meeting, Charleston, South Carolina

81. Klinkman MS. August 2005. Integrating depression treatment into primary care. Invited Plenary, Depression as a Public Health Concern in Michigan Conference; Sponsored by the Michigan Department of Community Health, Lansing, Michigan

82. Klinkman MS, Grazier K, Emptage N, Kerber K, Kuebler, J Avripas S, Adman T. October 2005. First results from the Depression in Primary Care demonstration project: Integrating “Disease Management” into the Primary Care process. 33rd Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

83. Klinkman, MS. March 2006. Depression in Primary Care: Collaboration, comorbidity, and chaos. Grand Rounds, St Joseph Mercy Hospital Department of Psychiatry, Ann Arbor, Michigan

84. Klinkman MS. May 2006. Integrating depression treatment into Primary Care practice. Special Meeting, Greater Flint Health Coalition Mental Health Task Force, Flint, Michigan

85. Klinkman MS. October 2007. A data model to support the patient-centered medical home. Invited Plenary, Harmonizing Primary Care Clinical Classification and Data Standards Conference. Washington, DC

86. Klinkman MS, Avipas S, Adman T, Aikens J, Kerber K, Kuebler J. October 2006. Does disease management affect patient attitudes, beliefs, or practices in chronically depressed patients? A Report From the Depression in Primary Care Project. 34th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG) Tucson, Arizona

87. Klinkman MS, Stewart M, Dovey S, Dahan R, Marshall N, Terry A. October 2006. International Forum on Primary Care Researchable Databases. 34th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Tucson, Arizona

88. Klinkman MS, Gask L. September 2007. Capturing Complexity: diagnosis and classification system for primary care. Invited presentation, International Advisory Group for the Revision of ICD-10 Mental and Behavioral Disorders, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.

89. Klinkman MS, Ackerman M, Mirel B, Avripas S. October 2007. Do primary care physicians understand the Chronic Care Model? A report from the Depression in Primary Care project. 35th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

90. Klinkman MS, Phillips, R. November 2007. Health IT to support the medical home. National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, Washington, DC

91. Klinkman MS. March 2008. New approaches to the classification of mental disorders in Primary Care. Invited Plenary, Classification of Functional Symptoms and Disorders in Primary Care Workshop, Nijmegen, Netherlands

92. Klinkman MS. May 2008. Health IT to Support the Patient Centered Medical Home. Invited Testimony, National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics Population/Quality Subcommittee, Hearings on Patient Centered Medical Home, Washington, DC

93. Klinkman MS, Fedewa S, Bauroth S, Sen A. November 2008. Does Tailored Care Management Improve Outcomes for Chronically Depressed Primary Care Patients? A report from the Depression in Primary Care project. 36th Annual Meeting, North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), San Juan, Puerto Rico

94. Klinkman MS. December 2008. Relevance of large groupings to ICD revision: Testing clinical utility in other contexts. Invited presentation, International Advisory Group for the Revision of ICD-10 Mental and Behavioral Disorders, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.

95. Klinkman MS. December 2008. Diagnosis of Illness in Primary Care: the LongView. Invited Plenary, Conference on Person-Centered Diagnosis and Care and the Future of Psychiatry, University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden.

96. Klinkman MS. April 2009. Assessing Functional Outcomes in Clinical Practice. Conference on Functional Outcomes: Key Endpoints in the Management of Major Depressive Disorders, Sponsored by Wyeth Pharmaceuticals. Atlanta, Georgia.

97. Klinkman MS. April 2009. MDD Treatment: Optimizing the Delivery of Care in Real-World Settings. Wyeth Focus on Treatment Adherence and Functional Outcomes Advisory Board, Atlanta, Georgia.

98. Klinkman MS. May 2009. Prospects for Person-Centered Diagnosis in General Medicine. Invited Plenary, Second Geneva Conference on Person-Centered Medicine: From Concepts to Practice. Co-sponsored by the World Psychiatric Association and World Organization of Family Doctors (Wonca). Geneva, Switzerland.

99. Klinkman MS, October 2009. Primary Care Classification: Then, Now, and the Next Generation. Invited Plenary, WHO-FIC Network Conference 2009, Seoul, Korea.

100. Klinkman MS, November 2009. Wonca, ICPC, and the Primary Care Electronic Patient Record. Invited Plenary, PEP 2009 [National Electronic Health Records Symposium] Sao Paulo, Brazil.

101. Klinkman MS, Gill J, Chen Y, Liberman M. November 2009. Impact of an EMR-based Intervention on Diagnosis and Follow-up of Depression in Primary Care: A National Network Study. 37th North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG) Annual Meeting, Montreal, Canada .

102. Klinkman MS, Ackerman M, Bauroth S, Burnett M, Lazar P, Mirel B, Torres T. November 2009. Progress in Building a Community-academic Partnership: The Greater Flint Depression in Primary Care Partnership. 37th North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG) Annual Meeting, Montreal, Canada.

103. Klinkman MS, Nease DE Jr. January 2010. The Michigan Depression in Primary Care Project and the Greater Flint Depression in Primary Care Partnership. APA/AAFP/AAP Shared Care Project Meeting, Dallas, Texas.

104. Klinkman MS. June 2010. The Michigan Depression Outreach and Collaborative Care program (M-DOCC). Presented to: Jackson Behavioral Health Summit, Jackson, Michigan.

105. Klinkman MS. October 2010. WICC and ICPC: What is Wonca’s International Classification of Primary Care? Invited Plenary, Symposium on eHealth in Primary Care Tomorrow: the Multilingual and Multicultural European Perspective. Brussels, Belgium.

106. Klinkman MS. December 2010. M-DOCC and Allegiance Health: Depression Disease Management in the Primary Care Setting. Presented to: Allegiance Health System Primary Care Grand Rounds, Jackson, Michigan.

107. Klinkman MS, van Weel C. October 6, 2011. A conceptual model for person-centered diagnosis in general medical practice. Presented at: Catalan Society of Family and Community Medicine Congress, Mataro, Spain.

108. Klinkman MS. January 31, 2013. Behavioral health management: beyond the Collaborative Care Model. Invited plenary presentation, Mackinac Learning Collaborative, Detroit, Michigan.

109. Klinkman MS, Feller N, Esterline D, Howell E. Feb 1, 2013. Allegiance Depression Management Program: early results and lessons learned. Jackson Behavioral Health Summit, Jackson, Michigan.

110. Klinkman MS, Fagnan L, Nease DE, Werner J. June 19, 2013. Finding a new path: PBRN redesign to respond to a changing clinical and economic landscape. Workshop. Presented at: AHRQ Annual PBRN Conference, Bethesda, Maryland.

111. Klinkman, MS. June 23, 2013. The Wonca International Classification Committee: 1972-2013. Plenary presentation to Wonca (World Organization of Family Doctors) Council. Prague, Czech Republic.

112. Klinkman MS, Kuehlein T, Jamoulle M et al. June 28, 2013. Introduction to ICPC – the International Classification of Primary Care.  Workshop. Presented at Wonca (World Organization of Family Doctors) World Assembly. Prague, Czech Republic.

113. Klinkman MS, Britt H, O’Halloran J et al. June 29, 2013 The Future of ICPC—the International Classification of Primary Care, version 3 (ICPC-3). Workshop. Presented at Wonca (World Organization of Family Doctors) World Assembly. Prague, Czech Republic.

114. Klinkman MS. September 20, 2013. Wonca, WHO and WHOFIC: Progress and challenges in ICD11. Invited plenary presentation at conference: “Managing information for primary care under National Health Insurance in South Africa”. School of Public Health, Wits Medical School, Johannesburg, South Africa.

115. Klinkman MS. December 10, 2013. Behavioral health integration: beyond the Collaborative Care Model. Featured research presentation, University of Colorado Department of Family Medicine, Denver, Colorado.

116. Klinkman MS. January 24, 2014. Depression Care Management Update. Jackson Behavioral Health Summit, Jackson, Michigan.

117. Klinkman MS. September 3, 2014. Behavioral Health integration in rural practice settings: hard lessons from the field. Invited presentation, statewide Webinar for Michigan Center on Rural Health.

118. Klinkman MS, Howell E, Parros J, Feller N, Hughes-Krieger E. April 15, 2015. Integrating behavioral health into primary care practice through research. Invited plenary research presentation, First Annual Allegiance Research Day, Jackson, Michigan.

119. Klinkman MS. June 19, 2015. Behavioral Health Integration for Michigan. Presented to: Michigan Primary Care Association, Lansing, Michigan.

120. Klinkman MS, Paulson L, Cross E. June 29, 2015. PBRN to CBRN: moving from a practice-based research network to a community-based research network in Michigan. Forum presentation, NAPCRG/AHRQ Annual PBRN Conference, Bethesda, Maryland.

121. Klinkman MS. November 5, 2015. Behavioral Health Integration for Michigan: working to create a scalable, sustainable community-academic partnership. Presented to: Michigan Primary Care Association, Lansing, Michigan.

Bibliography

Peer-Reviewed Articles

1. Garrett RE, Klinkman MS, Post L. If you meet the Buddha on the road, take a genogram: Zen and the art of family medicine. Fam Med. 19(3):225-6, 1987. (PM359617)

2. Klinkman MS. The process of choice of health care plan and provider: Development of an integrated analytic framework. Med Care Res Rev. 48(3):295-330, 1991. (PM10117149)

3. Klinkman MS, Zazove P, Mehr DR, Ruffin MT. A criterion-based review of preventive health care in the elderly: Part 1. Theoretical framework and development of criteria. J Fam Pract. 34(2):205-24, 1992. (PM1737970)

4. Zazove P, Mehr DR, Ruffin MT, Klinkman MS, Peggs JF, Davies TC. A criterion-based review of preventive health care in the elderly: Part 2. A geriatric health maintenance program. J Fam Pract. 34(3):320-47, 1992. (PM1541959)

5. Klinkman MS, Stevens D, Gorenflo DW. Episodes of care for chest pain: A preliminary report from MIRNET. J Fam Pract. 38(4):345-52, 1994. (PM8163958)

6. Klinkman MS, Green LA. Using ICPC in a microcomputer-based Primary Care Information System. Fam Med. 27(7):449-56, 1995. (PM7557010)

7. Klinkman MS, Green LA. Examining the process of primary care: Using ICPC in a microcomputer-based Primary Care Information System. Fam Med 27(7):449-56, 1995.

8. Klinkman MS. Episodes of care for abdominal pain in a primary care practice. Arch Fam Med. 5(5):279-85, 1996. (PM8620267)

9. Parkerson GR, Bridges-Webb C, Gervas J, Hofmans-Okkes I, Lamberts H, Froom J Fischer G, Meyboom B, Bentsen B, Klinkman MS, deMaeseneer J. Classification of severity of health problems in family/general practice: an international field trial. Fam Pract. 13(3):303-9, 1996. (PM8671140)

10. Klinkman MS. Competing Demands in Psychosocial Care: A model for the identification and treatment of depressive disorders in primary care. Gen Hosp Psych. 19(2):98-111, 1997. (PM9097064)

11. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC. Undeteted depression is not untreated depression: A report from the Michigan Depression Project. Int J Psychiatry Med. 27; 309-10, 1997.

12. Coyne JC, Klinkman MS, Gallo SM, Schwenk TL. Short-term outcomes of detected and undetected depressed primary care patients and depressed psychiatric patients. Gen Hosp Psych. 19(5):333-43, 1997. (PM9328778)

13. Klinkman MS, Gorenflo DW, Ritsema TL. The effects of insurance coverage on the quality of prenatal care. Arch Fam Med. 6(6):557-66, 1997. (PM9371050)

14. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC, Gallo SM, Schwenk TL. Can case-finding instruments be used to improve physician detection of depression in primary care? Arch Fam Med. 6(6):567-73, 1997. (PM9371051)

15. Klinkman MS, Schwenk TL, Coyne JC. Depression in primary care - more like asthma than appendicitis: The Michigan Depression Project. Can J Psychiatry. 42(9):966-73, 1997. (PM9429068)

16. Klinkman MS, Okkes I. Mental health problems in primary care: A research agenda. Int J Psychiatry Med. 28(4);361-75, 1998. (PM10207738)

17. Schwenk TL, Klinkman MS, Coyne JC. Depression in the family physician’s office – what the psychiatrist needs to know: The Michigan depression project. J Clin Psychiatry. 59 (suppl 20):94-100, 1998. (PM9881542)

18. Coyne JC, Gallo SM, Klinkman MS, Schwenk TL. Effects of recent and past major depression and distress on self-concept and coping. J Abnorm Psychol. 107(1):86-96, 1998. (PM9505041)

19. Zazove P, Klinkman MS. Developing a CQI program in a family medicine department. Jt Comm J Qual Improv. 24(8):391-406, 1998. (PM9739507)

20. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC, Gallo SM, Schwenk TL. False positives, false negatives, and the validity of the diagnosis of major depression in primary care. Arch Fam Med. 7(5):451-61, 1998. (PM9755738)

21. Klinkman MS, Okkes I. Mental health problems in primary care: A research agenda. J Fam Pract. 47(5):379-84, 1998. (PM9834775)

22. Valenstein MV, Klinkman MS, Becker S, Blow FC, Barry KL, Sattar A, Hill E. Concurrent treatment of patients with depression in the community: Provider practices, attitudes, and barriers to collaboration. J Fam Pract. 48(3):180-7, 1999. (PM10086760)

23. Klinkman MS. Strategies for effective management of depression in primary care. AM J Mang Care. (13 suppl):S783-93, 1999. Discussion S788-93. (PM10621069)

24. Pingitore D, Snowden L, Sansone RA, Klinkman MS. Persons with depressive symptoms and the treatments they receive: A comparison of primary care physicians and psychiatrists. Int J Psychiatry Med. 31(1):41-60, 2001. (PM11529390)

25. Coyne JC, Thompson R, Klinkman MS, Nease DE. Emotional disorders in primary care. J Consult Clin Psychol. 70(3):798-809, 2002. (PM12090384)

26. Nease DE, Klinkman MS, Volk RJ. Improved detection of depression in primary care through severity evaluation. J Fam Pract. 51(12):1065-70, 2002. (PM12540333)

27. Klinkman MS. The role of algorithms in the detection and treatment of depression in primary care. J Clin Psychiatry. 64(suppl 2):19-23, 2003. (PM12625795)

28. Aikens JE, Nease DE, Nau DP, Klinkman MS, Schwenk TL. Adherence to maintenance - phase antidepressant medication as a function of patient beliefs about medication. Ann Fam Med. 3(1):23-30, 2005. (PM15671187)

29. Nease DE Jr, Klinkman MS, Aikens JE. Severity and criteria based prompting for treatment of depressed patients. Int J Psychiatry Med. 35(2):149-59, 2005. (PM16240972)

30. Gaynes BN, Rush AJ, Trivedi M, Wisniewski SR, Balasubramani GK, Spencer DC, Petersen T, Klinkman MS, Warden D, Schneider RK, Castro DB, Golden, RN. A direct comparison of presenting characteristics of depressed outpatients from primary vs. specialty care settings: Preliminary findings from the STAR*D clinical trial. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 27(2):87-96, 2005. (PM15763119)

31. Mirel B, Ackerman MS, Kerber K, Klinkman M. Designing CIS to improve decisions in depression disease management: A discourse analysis of front line practice. AMIA Annu Symp Proc. :564-8, 2006. (PM17238404)

32. Kilbourne AM, McGinnis GF, Belnap BH, Klinkman MS, Thomas M. The role of clinical information technology in depression care management. Adm Policy Ment Health. 33(1):54-64, 2006. (PM16215661)

33. Grazier KL, Klinkman MS, The economics of integrated depression care: the university of Michigan study. Adm Policy Ment Health. 33(1):16-20, 2006. (PM16215878)

34. Nease DE Jr, Klinkman MS, Aikens JE . Depression case finding in primary care: A method for the mandates. Int J Psychiatry Med. 36(2):141-51, 2006. (PM17154144)

35. Klinkman MS. A whole new world: Complexity theory and mood variability in mental disorders Prim care companion. J Clin Psychiatry. 9(3); 180-2, 2007. (PMC1911185)

36. Gaynes BN, Rush AJ, Trivedi M, Wisniewski SR, Balasubramani GK, Spencer DC,

Petersen T, Klinkman MS, Warden D, Nicholas L, Fava M. Major depression symptoms in primary care and psychiatric settings: A cross-sectional analysis. Ann Fam Med. 5(2):126-34. 2007. (PM17389536)

37. Aikens JE, Kroenke K, Nease DE Jr, Klinkman MS, Sen A. Trajectories of improvement for six depression-related outcomes. Gen Hos Psychiatry. 30(1):26-31, 2008. (PM18164937)

38. Aikens JE, Nease DE, Jr., Klinkman MS. Explaining patients’ beliefs about the necessity and harmfulness of antidepressants. Ann Fam Med. 6(1):23-9, 2008. (PM18195311) PMCID: PMC2203394

39. Bryan CJ, Songer TJ, Brooks MM, Thase ME, Gaynes BN, Klinkman M, Rush AJ, Trivedi MH, Fava M, Wisniewski SR. A comparison of baseline sociodemographic and clinical characteristics between major depressive disorder patients with and without diabetes: A STAR*D report. J Affect Disord. 108(1-2):113-20. 2008. (PM18037497)

40. Gaynes BN, Rush AJ, Trivedi M, Wisniewski SR, Balasubramani GK, McGrath PJ, Thase MT, Klinkman M, Nierenberg AA, Yates WR, Fava M. Primary versus specialty care outcomes for depressed outpatients managed with measurement-based care: results from STAR*D. J Gen Intern Med. 23(5):551-60, 2008. (PMpm18247097) PMCID: PMC2324144

41. Nease DE Jr., Ruffin MT 4th, Klinkman MS, Jimbo M, Braun TM, Underwood JM. Impact of a generalizable reminder system on colorectal cancer screening in diverse primary care practices: A report from the prompting and reminding at encounters for prevention project. Med Care. 46(9 supp 1):S68-73, 2008. (PM18725836)

42. Gask L, Klinkman M, Fortes S, Dowrick C. Capturing complexity: The case for a new classification system for mental disorders in primary care. Eur Psychiatry. 23(7):469-76, 2008. (PM18774269)

43. Zivin K, Kerber K, Kuebler J, Jiang Q, Walters H, Klinkman M, McInnis M, Valenstein M. Effectiveness of a depression disease management program in improving depression andd work function—a pilot study. Int J Psychiatry Med. 39(1):1-13. 2009.(PM19650526)

44. Klinkman MS. Assessing functional outcomes in clinical practice. Am J Managed Care. 15:(11 supp):S335-42, 2009. (PM20088630)

45. Bryan C, Songer T, Brooks MM, Thase ME, Gaynes B, Klinkman M, Balasubramani GK, Rush AJ, Trivedi MH, Fava M, Wisniewski SR. Do depressed patients with diabetes experience more side effects when treated with Citalopram than their counterparts without diabetes? a STAR*D study. Prim Care Companion J Clin Psychiatry. 11(5):186-96. 2009. (PM19956455) PMCID: PMC2781029

46. Klinkman MS, Bauroth S, Fedewa S, Kerber K, Kuebler J, Adman T, Sen A. Long-term clinical outcomes of care management for chronically depressed primary care patients: A report from the depression in primary care project. Ann Fam Med. 8(5):387-96. 2010. (PM20843879) PMCID: PMC2939413

47. Gill JM, Klinkman MS, Chen YX. Antidepressant medication use for primary care patients with and without medical comorbidities? A national electronic health record (EHR) network study. J Am Board Fam Med. 23(4):499-508. 2010. (PM20616292)

48. Klinkman M, van Weel C. Prospects for person-centered diagnosis in general medicine. J Eval Clin Pract. 17(2): 365-70. 2011. (PM21091852)

49. Nease DE Jr, Aikens JE, Klinkman MS, Kroenke K, Sen A. Toward a more comprehensive assessment of depression remission: The Remission Evaluation and Mood Inventory Tool (REMIT). Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 33(3):279-86. 2011. (PM21601725)

50. Gill JM, Chen YX, Grimes A, Diamond JJ, Lieberman MI, Klinkman MS. Electronic clinical decision support for management of depression in primary care: A prospective cohort study. Primary Care Companion for CNS Disorders. 14(1), 2012. (PM22690364)

51. Aikens JE, Klinkman MS. Changes in patients' beliefs about their antidepressant during the acute phase of depression treatment. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 34(3):221-6. 2012. (PM22325627)

52. Gill JM, Chen YX, Grimes A, Klinkman MS. Using electronic health record-based tools to screen for bipolar disorder in primary care patients with depression. J Am Board Fam Med. 25(3):283-90. 2012. (PM22570391)

53. Mohr DC, Burns MN, Schueller SM, Clark G, Klinkman M. Behavioral intervention technologies: Evedince review and recommendations for future research in mental health. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 35(4):332-8, 2013. (PM23664503) PMCID: PMC3719158

54. Haberer JE, Trabin T, Klinkman M. Furthering the reliable and valid measurement of mental health screening, diagnoses, treatment and outcomes through health information technology. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 35(34):349-53, 2013. (PM23628162) PMCID: PMC3692579

55. Lam TP, Goldberg DP, Dowell AC, Fortes S, Mbatia JK, Minhas FA, Klinkman MS. Proposed new diagnoses of anxious depression and bodily stress syndrome in ICD-11-PHC: an international focus group study. Fam Pract. 30(1):76-87, 2013. (PM22843638)

56. Krist AH, Beasley JW, Crosson JC, Kibbe DC, Klinkman MS, Lehmann CU, Fox CH, Mitchell JM, Mold JW, Pace WD, Peterson KA, Phillips RL, Post R, Puro J, Raddock M, Simkus R, Waldren SE. Electronic health record functionality needed to better support primary care. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2014;21(5):764-71. (PM24431335) PMCID: PMC4147605

57. Krist AH, Green LA, Phillips RL, Beasley JW, DeVoe JE, Klinkman MS, Hughes J, Puro J, Fox CH, Burdick T; NAPCRG Health Information Technology Working Group. Health information technology needs help from primary care researchers. J Am Board Fam Med. 2015;28(3):306-10. (PM25957361) PMCID: PMC4450103

58. Green LA, Nease D Jr, Klinkman MS. Clinical reminders designed and implemented using cognitive and organizational science principles decrease reminder fatigue. J Am Board Fam Med. 2015;28(3):351-9. (PM25957368)

59. Green LA, Klinkman M. Perspectives in primary care: The foundational and urgent importance of a shared primary care data model. Ann Fam Med. 2015;13:303-311. (PM26195672)

60. Aikens JE, Klinkman MS, Sen A, Nease DE Jr. Improving the assessment of depression remission with the Remission Evaluation and Mood Inventory Tool (REMIT). Int J Psychiatry Med. 2015;50(4):383-97. (PM26526397)

Non Peer-Reviewed Publications

1. Klinkman MS. Geriatrics Review Syllabus: A Core Curriculum in Geriatric Medicine. J Fam Pract, 35: 695-96,1993. [book review]

2. Klinkman MS. Basic Dysrhythmias: Interpretation and Management (2nd ed). J Fam Pract, 40: 607-8,1995. [book review]

3. Smith M, Klinkman MS. Procedural training in family practice residency programs: Look before you LEEP. Fam Med, 27(8):535-8, 1995. [editorial comment]

4. Ruffin MT IV, Klinkman MS, Fetters MD, Green LA. Screening for prostate cancer. JAMA, 273(15):1175, 1995. [article]

5. Sonis J, Doukas D, Klinkman MS, Reed B, Ruffin MT. Applicability of clinical trial results to primary care. JAMA, 280(20):1746, 1997. [article]

6. Kathol RG, Katon WJ, Klinkman MS, Schulberg HC. Depression: Moving from diagnosis to wellness? Medical Crossfire, 2:39-44, 1998. [article]

7. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC, Gallo S. Comorbidity and depressive disorders in family practice. Arch Fam Med; 9(2):124, 2000. [reply]

8. Klinkman MS. A whole new world: complexity theory and mood variability in mental disorders. Prim Care Companion J Clin Psychiatry, 9(3):180-2, 2007. [editorial] PMC1911185

Book Chapters

1. Klinkman MS, Kelly RE. A primer on quasi-experimental research design. In: Selected Proceedings of the 1986 and 1987 Primary Care Research Methods and Statistics Conferences. Edited by the NAPCRG Task Force on Methodology; published by the North American Primary Care Research Group, 1989.

2. Klinkman MS. Chest pain. In: Taylor, RB, ed. Manual of Family Practice. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Co., 51-5, 1996.

3. Valenstein M, Klinkman MS. Minor depressive disorders. In: Knesper D, Riba M, and Schwenk T, eds., Primary Care Psychiatry. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Co., 95-106, 1997.

4. Klinkman MS, Valenstein M. A general approach to psychiatric problems in the primary care setting. In: Knesper D, Riba M, and Schwenk T, eds., Primary Care Psychiatry. Philadelphia: W.B.Saunders Co., 3-8, 1997.

5. Klinkman MS. Cardiac arrhythmias. In: Taylor, RB, ed. Family Medicine: Principles and Practice, 5th ed. New York: Springer-Verlag., 664-82, 1998.

6. Klinkman MS. Chest pain in primary care. In: Weiss BD, ed. 20 Common Problems in Family Practice. McGraw-Hill. New York, NY., 361-88, 1998.

7. Klinkman MS. Chest pain. In: Taylor, RB, ed. 2 Manual of Family Practice. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. Hagerstown, MD., 2001.

8. Klinkman MS. Longitudinal Data Collection in Primary Care Research. In: Selected Proceedings, Practice Based Research Networks Research Methods Conference. American Academy of Family Physicians Press. 2002.

9. Klinkman MS. Cardiac arrhythmias. In: Taylor, RB, ed. Family Medicine: Principles and Practice, 6th ed. New York: Springer-Verlag., 644-62, 2003.

10. Klinkman MS. Cardiac arrhythmias. In: Taylor, RB, ed. Taylor’s Cardiovascular Diseases: a handbook. New York: Springer Science+Business Media., 52-92, 2005.

11. Dowrick CF, Klinkman MS. Classification of Mental Disorders in Primary Care.

In: Section 1.7, WHO/WONCA document, Integration of Mental Health into Primary Care. 2007.

12. Klinkman MS, Gask L. Mental and General Health Comorbidities in Persons Presenting in Primary Care. In: Salloum IM and Mezzich JE, eds., Psychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects. Chippenham, Wiltshire: Wiley-Blackwell, 197-211, 2009.

13. Gask L, Dowrick C, Klinkman M, Gureje O. Diagnosis and classification of mental illness: a view from primary care. In: Gask L, Lester H, Kendrick T and Peveler R, eds., Primary Care Mental Health. London: Royal College of Psychiatrists, RCPsych Publications, 88-106. 2009.

Books

1. WONCA Classification Committee. ICPC-2: the International Classification of Primary Care, 2nd edition. Oxford University Press, London. 1998.

2. WONCA Classification Committee. ICPC-2-R: the International Classification of Primary Care, 2nd edition, REVISED. Oxford University Press, London. 2005.

3. Harmonizing Primary Care Clinical Classification and Data Standards. Phillips, RL, Klinkman M, and Green LA, eds. Robert Graham Center, 2008. On-line access at:

4. Integrating Mental Health into Primary Care: A Global Perspective. World Health Organization and World Organization of Family Doctors (WONCA). 2008.

Commentary

1. Klinkman MS. A Whole New World: Complexity Theory and Mood Variability in Mental Disorders, Prim Care Companion J Clin Psychiatry, 9(3):180-2, 2007.

Other Media

Electronic Publications

1. WONCA Classification Committee. ICPC-2-E: the International Classification of Primary Care, 2nd edition, electronic version with mapping to ICD. Accessible and downloadable at the website of: Norwegian Centre for Informatics in Health and Social Care. 2003 – 2011.

Software/Licensing Agreements

1. Green LA, Klinkman MS, Nease DE. ClinfoTracker (computer software). Clinical Prompt/Reminder System (CPRS) designed to provide relevant and up-to-date information regarding needed preventive and disease management services at the point of care, 2005. Licensed to Cielo MedSolutions, LLC, through University of Michigan Office of Technology Transfer, 2006.





2. University of Michigan Depression Center. MSTRIDES and M-DOCC [Michigan Depression Outcomes and Collaborative Care] (computer software). Two complementary software applications: MSTRIDES provides on-line outcome measurement functionality to support disease management. M-DOCC provides a disease management software application for use by care managers to supplement and document clinical care. [I was part of core development and field testing team].

Can be viewed at:

3. Klinkman MS, Kerber K, Kaston M. M-DOCC Clinical Record (computer software).

Full-service (workflow, clinical, monitoring) care management software application designed to support integrated behavioral health management. Invention reported to University of Michigan Office of Technology Transfer 2013, licensing in progress.

4. Klinkman MS. Comprehensive Health Assessment Tool (CHAT) and Care Coordination Module (computer software). Multiscale assessment, outcome monitoring, and care management communication application, designed for and integrated into Jackson Community Medical Record [NextGen Electronic Health Record] software. 2014.

Continuing Medical Education materials

1. Klinkman MS, Barrett J, Schulberg HC, Strain J. Depression in Primary Care. Full suite of Video CME materials to support primary care detection and treatment of depressive disorders (didactic materials and case vignettes). Director of CME program, developed with NBC/Healthology. Integrated into GE Centricity Electronic Medical Record. 2007.

2. Klinkman MS. Depression in Primary Care: Overview of Psychopharmacology for Depression. One of a series of audio and video Web-based CME modules developed under auspices of Depression initiative. Developer and presenter of 1 hour audio CME presentation for Web posting. 2007.

3. Klinkman MS, Turner JA. Managing Coexisting Pain and Depression. Developed, scripted, and served as lead panelist / discussant for this Web-based video CME course sponsored and presented by the American Academy of Family Physicians Learning Link. This one-hour program consisted of 3 modules: The Relationship Between Chronic Pain and Depression; The Diagnosis of Depression in the Patient with Chronic Pain; and Ongoing Management Issues and Strategies. 2009. Available at:

4. Klinkman MS. Ruling Out Medical Causes of Depression. Developed, scripted and presented audio CME presentation for QuantiaMD Primary Mental Health series, Evidence-Based TRD Strategies. 2010. Available at:

Published Abstracts

1. Klinkman MS, Gorenflo DW. Using episodes of care to test a model of clinical decision making in primary care. Med Decis Making, 13(4):390, 1993.

2. Klinkman MS, Gorenflo DW. “Hidden” interprovider variation in resource use during episodes of care for abdominal pain. Med Decis Making, 14(4):435, 1994.

3. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC, Gallo SM, Schwenk TL. The problem of “false positives” in primary care physician detection of depression: Can screening instruments help? Int J Psychiatry Med, 26(3):371-3, 1997.

4. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC. Undetected depression is not untreated depression: A report from the Michigan Depression Project. Int J Psychiatry Med, 27(4):309-10, 1997.

5. Coyne JC, Klinkman MS, Anderson K, Schwenk TL. Differences between depressed primary care and psychiatric patients: A 52 month perspective. Int J Psychiatry Med, 28:383, 1998.

6. Nease DE, Klinkman MS, Volk RJ. Improving the accuracy of mood disorder screening through use of a severity measure. Int J Psychiatry Med, 29(4):385, 1999.

7. Klinkman MS, Coyne JC. Treatment intensity in "detected" and "undetected" depressed primary care patients: A report from the Michigan Depression Project. Int J Psychiatry Med, 29(4):382, 1999.

8. Aikens, JE, Nease, DE, Klinkman, MS, Pecora, KE. What causes depressed patients to believe they need an antidepressant? Proceedings of the 31st Annual Meeting of the North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG), Banff, Canada, 2003.

9. Richardson CR, Mihaescu M, Klinkman MS et al. Restless legs syndrome: prevalence in a family practice population. Sleep, 26:A330, 2003.

10. Gaynes BN, Rush AJ, Trivedi M, Wisniewski SR, Balasubramani GK, Spencer DC, Petersen T, Klinkman MS, Warden D, Schneider RK, Castro DB, Golden, RN Presentations of Depression in Primary Care vs. Special Care Settings: Results From STAR*D. Neuropsychopharmacology, 29:S103, 2004.

11. Nease DE Jr., Aikens JE, Kroenke K, Klinkman MS. The remission evaluation and mood inventory tool project-toward a broader measure of depression remission for Primary Care, Journal of The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists, 41(Sup 2):A319, 2007.

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