Literature DB >> 15671185

Cost-effectiveness of enhancing primary care depression management on an ongoing basis.

Kathryn Rost1, Jeffrey M Pyne, L Miriam Dickinson, Anthony T LoSasso.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Although potentially costly, enhancing primary care depression management on an ongoing basis results in substantial long-term treatment effectiveness. The purpose of this article is to compare the cost-effectiveness of this approach with that of usual care.
METHODS: The study was conducted in 12 community primary care practices randomized to enhanced or usual care after stratification by baseline practice patterns. Practices assigned to enhanced care encouraged depressed patients to engage in active treatment, using practice nurses to provide regularly scheduled care management during the course of 24 months. We analyze outcomes for 211 adults (73.4% of potential eligible patients) beginning a new treatment episode for major depression determined by previsit screening. Outcomes included blinded estimates of days free of depression impairment as well as health care costs for 2 years.
RESULTS: Enhanced care significantly increased the number of days free of depression impairment for 2 years when compared with usual care (647.6 days vs 588.2 days, P <.01). The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for enhanced care ranged from 9,592 dollars to 14,306 dollars per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY). The number of incremental days free of depression impairment increased between the first year and the second year (23.0 vs 36.4, respectively, P <.001) while incremental health plan costs decreased significantly (568 dollars vs -12 dollars, P <.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Enhancing primary care depression management on an ongoing basis should be considered for adoption by policy and health plan leaders.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15671185      PMCID: PMC1350977          DOI: 10.1370/afm.256

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Fam Med        ISSN: 1544-1709            Impact factor:   5.166


  48 in total

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  37 in total

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2.  Depression research in primary care: pushing the field forward.

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6.  Mental Health Recovery in the Patient-Centered Medical Home.

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Review 7.  Cost-effectiveness of collaborative care for the treatment of major depressive disorder in primary care. A systematic review.

Authors:  Kirsten M van Steenbergen-Weijenburg; Christina M van der Feltz-Cornelis; Eva K Horn; Harm W J van Marwijk; Aartjan T F Beekman; Frans F H Rutten; Leona Hakkaart-van Roijen
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9.  Clinician burden and depression treatment: disentangling patient- and clinician-level effects of medical comorbidity.

Authors:  L Miriam Dickinson; W Perry Dickinson; Kathryn Rost; Frank DeGruy; Caroline Emsermann; Desireé Froshaug; Paul A Nutting; Lisa Meredith
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Review 10.  The estimation of utility weights in cost-utility analysis for mental disorders: a systematic review.

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