Chunyu Li 1 , Andrew W Dick , Kevin Fiscella , Yeates Conwell , Bruce Friedman . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether having a usual source of care (USOC) resulted in lower depression prevalence among the elderly. DATA SOURCES: The 2001-2003 Medicare Current Beneficiaries Survey and 2002 Area Resource File. STUDY DESIGN: Twenty thousand four hundred and fifty-five community-dwelling person-years were identified for respondents aged 65+, covered by both Medicare Parts A and B in Medicare fee-for-service for a full year. USOC was defined by the question "Is there a particular medical person or a clinic you usually go to when you are sick or for advice about your health?" Ambulatory care use (ACU) was defined by having at least one physician office visit and/or hospital outpatient visit using Medicare claims. Depression was identified by a two-item screen (sadness and/or anhedonia). All measures were for the past 12 months. A simultaneous-equations (trivariate probit) model was estimated, adjusted for sampling weights and study design effects. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Based on the simultaneous-equations model, USOC is associated with 3.8 percent lower probability of having depression symptoms (p=.03). Also, it had a positive effect on having any ACU (p<.001). Having any ACU had no statistically significant effect on depression (p=.96). CONCLUSIONS: USOC was associated with lower depression prevalence and higher realized access (ACU) among community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries. © Health Research and Educational Trust.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether having a usual source of care (USOC) resulted in lower depression prevalence among the elderly. DATA SOURCES: The 2001-2003 Medicare Current Beneficiaries Survey and 2002 Area Resource File. STUDY DESIGN: Twenty thousand four hundred and fifty-five community-dwelling person -years were identified for respondents aged 65+, covered by both Medicare Parts A and B in Medicare fee-for-service for a full year. USOC was defined by the question "Is there a particular medical person or a clinic you usually go to when you are sick or for advice about your health?" Ambulatory care use (ACU) was defined by having at least one physician office visit and/or hospital outpatient visit using Medicare claims. Depression was identified by a two-item screen (sadness and/or anhedonia). All measures were for the past 12 months. A simultaneous-equations (trivariate probit) model was estimated, adjusted for sampling weights and study design effects. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Based on the simultaneous-equations model, USOC is associated with 3.8 percent lower probability of having depression symptoms (p=.03). Also, it had a positive effect on having any ACU (p<.001). Having any ACU had no statistically significant effect on depression (p=.96). CONCLUSIONS: USOC was associated with lower depression prevalence and higher realized access (ACU) among community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries. © Health Research and Educational Trust.
Entities: Disease
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Year: 2011
PMID: 21306366 PMCID: PMC3165178 DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2011.01240.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Serv Res ISSN: 0017-9124 Impact factor: 3.402