Profile: Greg Hudson, DNP, ARNP

Greg Hudson, DNP, ARNP works as a PMHNP in the Tacoma area. He is currently practicing at Greater Lakes Mental Healthcare in Lakewood, WA, working with both adults and children in an outpatient community mental health setting. Additionally, he is working with Hope Sparks, a counseling agency for children and families in Tacoma, to establish a collaborative medical practice.

Mr. Hudson was led to the collaborative care fellowship after witnessing the gaps in service and challenges that his clients experience when transferring to primary care. He is especially interested in developing a model of care that provides more collaborative support for primary care providers to care for psychiatric patients. He is looking forward to collaborating and building relationships with the UW faculty and providers throughout the state.

Greater Lakes struggles with the push to transition stable clients out to primary care that is not equipped to handle their needs. A common topic of discussion amongst his coworkers surrounds those in the community who are “recycled” back to Greater Lakes after crisis or hospitalization due to lack of community services. In Pierce County, the opening of a new psychiatric hospital Wellfound (a 120 bed joint-venture between CHI and Multicare) is sure to change the landscape of psychiatric care in the South sound. While more psychiatric beds are welcome, the people that fill those beds will need quality psychiatric care after discharge.

Mr. Hudson is enrolling in the collaborative care fellowship to help prepare for these changes and promote systems of integrated and collaborative care in the community.  

Mr. Hudson hopes that his participation in this program will help him to understand and implement a model of care where psychiatric specialists can provide support and consultation to primary care providers. He hopes that he can be a “leader from the front lines”, working with clients, providers, and the systems that manage them to close existing gaps and best utilize available resources. He hopes that in the future psychiatric care is more accessible and less stigmatizing for those in need and collaborative care is the norm rather than the exception.