Practice-Based Versus Telemedicine-Based Collaborative Care for Depression in Rural Federally Qualified Health Centers: A Pragmatic Randomized Comparative Effectiveness Trial

被引:174
|
作者
Fortney, John C. [1 ]
Pyne, Jeffrey M.
Mouden, Sip B.
Mittal, Dinesh
Hudson, Teresa J.
Schroeder, Gary W.
Williams, David K.
Bynum, Carol A.
Mattox, Rhonda
Rost, Kathryn M.
机构
[1] Univ Arkansas Med Sci, Div Hlth Serv Res, Dept Psychiat, Coll Med, Little Rock, AR 72205 USA
来源
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY | 2013年 / 170卷 / 04期
关键词
POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; NEUROPSYCHIATRIC INTERVIEW MINI; MAJOR DEPRESSION; MENTAL-HEALTH; FUNCTIONAL HEALTH; MANAGEMENT; OUTCOMES; THERAPY; VIDEOCONFERENCE;
D O I
10.1176/appi.ajp.2012.12050696
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Objective: Practice-based collaborative care is a complex evidence-based practice that is difficult to implement in smaller primary care practices that lack on:site mental health staff. Telemedicine-based collaborative care virtually co-locates and integrates mental health providers into primary care settings. The objective of this multisite randomized pragmatic comparative effectiveness trial was to compare the outcomes of patients assigned to practice-based and telemedicine-based collaborative care. Method: From 2007 to 2009, patients at federally qualified health centers serving medically underserved populations were screened for depression, and 364 patients who screened positive were enrolled and followed for 18 months. Those assigned to practice-based collaborative care received evidence-based care from an on-site primary care provider and a nurse care manager. Those assigned to telemedicine-based collaborative care received evidence-based care from an on-site primary care provider and an off-site team: a nurse care manager and a pharmacist by telephone, and a psychologist and a psychiatrist via videoconferencing. The primary clinical outcome measures were treatment response, remission, and change in depression severity. Results: Significant group main effects were observed for both response (odds ratio=7.74, 95% CI=3.94-15.20) and remission (odds ratio=12.69, 95% CI=4.81-33.46), and a significant overall group-by-time interaction effect was observed for depression severity on the Hopkins Symptom Checklist, with greater reductions in severity over time for. patients in the telemedicine-based group. Improvements in outcomes appeared to be attributable to higher fidelity to the collaborative care evidence base in the telemedicine-based group. Conclusions: Contracting with an off-site telemedicine-based collaborative care team can yield better outcomes than implementing practice-based collaborative care with locally available staff. (Am J Psychiatry 2013; 170:414-425)
引用
下载
收藏
页码:414 / 425
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] How practice context impacts external facilitation strategies to promote implementation of evidence-based guidelines: a comparative case analysis in small independent practice and federally qualified health centers
    Shelley, Donna
    Pastel, Allison
    Niles, Paulomi
    Rogers, Erin
    Padgett, Deborah
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2017, 13
  • [22] ARE THERE GENDER-BASED DIFFERENCES IN PRESCRIBING STATINS IN FEDERALLY QUALIFIED HEALTH CARE CENTERS? EVIDENCE FROM OFFICE-GUIDELINES APPLIED TO PRACTICE (OFFICE-GAP)
    Olomu, Ade B.
    Khan, Nazia Naz S.
    Kelly-Blake, Karen
    Kavuturu, Shilpa
    Luo, Zhehui
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2016, 31 : S124 - S125
  • [23] Baseline screening tools as indicators for symptom outcomes and health services utilization in a collaborative care model for depression in primary care: a practice-based observational study
    Shippee, Nathan D.
    Rosen, Brooke H.
    Angstman, Kurt B.
    Fuentes, Manuel E.
    DeJesus, Ramona S.
    Bruce, Steven M.
    Williams, Mark D.
    GENERAL HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRY, 2014, 36 (06) : 563 - 569
  • [24] 12-Month Outcomes of Community Engagement Versus Technical Assistance to Implement Depression Collaborative Care A Partnered, Cluster, Randomized, Comparative Effectiveness Trial
    Chung, Bowen
    Ong, Michael
    Ettner, Susan L.
    Jones, Felica
    Gilmore, James
    McCreary, Michael
    Sherbourne, Cathy
    Ngo, Victoria
    Koegel, Paul
    Tang, Lingqi
    Dixon, Elizabeth
    Miranda, Jeanne
    Belin, Thomas R.
    Wells, Kenneth B.
    ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2014, 161 (10) : S23 - S34
  • [25] Clinical effectiveness of care managers in collaborative primary health care for patients with depression: 12-and 24-month follow-up of a pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial
    Hammarberg, Sandra af Winklerfelt
    Bjorkelund, Cecilia
    Nejati, Shabnam
    Magnil, Maria
    Hange, Dominique
    Svenningsson, Irene
    Petersson, Eva-Lisa
    Andre, Malin
    Udo, Camilla
    Ariai, Nashmil
    Wallin, Lars
    Wikberg, Carl
    Westman, Jeanette
    BMC PRIMARY CARE, 2022, 23 (01):
  • [26] Clinical effectiveness of care managers in collaborative primary health care for patients with depression: 12- and 24-month follow-up of a pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial
    Sandra af Winklerfelt Hammarberg
    Cecilia Björkelund
    Shabnam Nejati
    Maria Magnil
    Dominique Hange
    Irene Svenningsson
    Eva-Lisa Petersson
    Malin André
    Camilla Udo
    Nashmil Ariai
    Lars Wallin
    Carl Wikberg
    Jeanette Westman
    BMC Primary Care, 23
  • [27] The Dementia Care Study: Design of a Pragmatic Trial of the Effectiveness and Cost Effectiveness of Health System-Based Versus Community-Based Dementia Care Versus Usual Dementia Care (vol 68, pg 2492, 2020)
    Reuben, D. B.
    Gill, T. M.
    Stevens, A.
    Williamson, J.
    Volpi, E.
    Lichtenstein, M.
    Jennings, L. A.
    Tan, Z.
    Evertson, L.
    Bass, D.
    Weitzman, L.
    Carnie, M.
    Wilson, N.
    Araujo, K.
    Charpentier, P.
    Meng, C.
    Greene, E. J.
    Dziura, J.
    Liu, J.
    Unger, E.
    Yang, M.
    Currie, K.
    Lenoir, K. M.
    Green, A. S.
    Abraham, S.
    Vernon, A.
    Samper-Ternent, R.
    Raji, M.
    Hirst, R. M.
    Galloway, R.
    Finney, G. R.
    Ladd, I
    Rahm, A. K.
    Borek, P.
    Peduzzi, P.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2022, 70 (06) : E19 - E19
  • [28] Collaborative Care Versus Screening and Follow-up for Patients With Diabetes and Depressive Symptoms: Results of a Primary Care-Based Comparative Effectiveness Trial
    Johnson, Jeffrey A.
    Al Sayah, Fatima
    Wozniak, Lisa
    Rees, Sandra
    Soprovich, Allison
    Qiu, Weiyu
    Chik, Constance L.
    Chue, Pierre
    Florence, Peter
    Jacquier, Jennifer
    Lysak, Pauline
    Opgenorth, Andrea
    Katon, Wayne
    Majumdar, Sumit R.
    DIABETES CARE, 2014, 37 (12) : 3220 - 3226
  • [29] Primary care guidelines on consultation practices:: The effectiveness of computerized versus paper-based versions -: A cluster randomized controlled trial among newly qualified primary care physicians
    Jousimaa, J
    Mäkelä, M
    Kunnamo, L
    MacLennan, G
    Grimshaw, JM
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT IN HEALTH CARE, 2002, 18 (03) : 586 - 596
  • [30] C3FIT (Coordinated, Collaborative, Comprehensive, Family-Based, Integrated, and Technology-Enabled Care): A Randomized Controlled Comparative Effectiveness Trial on Stroke Health Care Delivery
    Gopal, Neethu
    Nordan, Lisa
    Commiskey, Patricia
    Graddy, Courtney
    Freeman, William
    NEUROLOGY, 2019, 92 (15)