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Collaborative depression treatment in older and younger adults with physical illness: pooled comparative analysis of three randomized clinical trials.


ABSTRACT: There have been few comparisons of the effectiveness of collaborative depression care between older versus younger adults with comorbid illness, particularly among low-income populations.Intent-to-treat analyses are conducted on pooled data from three randomized controlled trials that tested collaborative care aimed at improving depression, quality of life, and treatment receipt.Trials were conducted in oncology and primary care safety net clinics and diverse home healthcare programs.Thousand eighty-one patients with major depressive symptoms and cancer, diabetes, or other comorbid illness.Similar intervention protocols included patient, provider, sociocultural, and organizational adaptations.The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ)-9 depression, Short-Form Health Survey-12/20 quality of life, self-reported hospitalization, ER, intensive care unit utilization, and antidepressant, psychotherapy treatment receipt are assessed at baseline, 6, and 12 months.There are no significant differences in reducing depression symptoms (p ranged 0.18-0.58), improving quality of life (t = 1.86, df = 669, p = 0.07 for physical functioning at 12 months, and p ranged 0.23-0.99 for all others) patients aged between >/=60 years versus 18-59 years. Both age group intervention patients have significantly higher rates of a 50% PHQ-9 reduction (older: Wald chi[df = 1] = 4.82, p = 0.03; younger: Wald chi[df = 1] = 6.47, p = 0.02), greater reduction in major depression rates (older: Wald chi[df = 1] = 7.72, p = 0.01; younger: Wald chi[df = 1] = 4.0, p = 0.05) than enhanced-usual-care patients at 6 months and no significant age group differences in treatment type or intensity.Collaborative depression care in individuals with comorbid illness is as effective in reducing depression in older patients as younger patients, including among low-income, minority patients. Patient, provider, and organizational adaptations of depression care management models may contribute to positive outcomes.

SUBMITTER: Ell K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2875343 | biostudies-literature | 2010 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Collaborative depression treatment in older and younger adults with physical illness: pooled comparative analysis of three randomized clinical trials.

Ell Kathleen K   Aranda María P MP   Xie Bin B   Lee Pey-Jiuan PJ   Chou Chih-Ping CP  

The American journal of geriatric psychiatry : official journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry 20100601 6


<h4>Objective</h4>There have been few comparisons of the effectiveness of collaborative depression care between older versus younger adults with comorbid illness, particularly among low-income populations.<h4>Design</h4>Intent-to-treat analyses are conducted on pooled data from three randomized controlled trials that tested collaborative care aimed at improving depression, quality of life, and treatment receipt.<h4>Settings</h4>Trials were conducted in oncology and primary care safety net clinic  ...[more]

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