OBJECTIVE: To compare collaborative care for treatment of depression in primary care with consult‐liaison (CL) care. In collaborative care, a mental health team provided a treatment plan to the primary care provider, telephoned patients to support adherence to the plan, reviewed treatment results, and suggested modifications to the provider. In CL care, study clinicians informed the primary care provider of the diagnosis and facilitated referrals to psychiatry residents practicing in the primary care clinic.
DESIGN: Patients were randomly assigned to treatment model by clinic firm.
SETTING: VA primary care clinic.
PARTICIPANTS: One hundred sixty‐eight collaborative care and 186 CL patients who met criteria for major depression and/or dysthymia.
MEASUREMENTS: Hopkins Symptom Checklist (SCL‐20), Short Form (SF)‐36, Sheehan Disability Scale.
MAIN RESULTS: Collaborative care produced greater improvement than CL in depressive symptomatology from baseline to 3 months (SCL‐20 change scores), but at 9 months there was no significant difference. The intervention increased the proportion of patients receiving prescriptions and cognitive behavioral therapy. Collaborative care produced significantly greater improvement on the Sheehan at 3 months. A greater proportion of collaborative care patients exhibited an improvement in SF‐36 Mental Component Score of 5 points or more from baseline to 9 months.
CONCLUSIONS: Collaborative care resulted in more rapid improvement in depression symptomatology, and a more rapid and sustained improvement in mental health status compared to the more standard model. Mounting evidence indicates that collaboration between primary care providers and mental health specialists can improve depression treatment and supports the necessary changes in clinic structure and incentives.
Better coordination and communication under collaborative care was associated with a greater number of patients being treated for depression and with moderate increases in days free of depression and in treatment cost. Additional resources are needed for effective collaborative care models for depression treatment in primary care.
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