| Literature DB >> 29630615 |
Stephanie K Y Choi1,2, Eleanor Boyle3,4, John Cairney3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13, Paul Grootendorst14,15,16, Sandra Gardner3,17, Evan J Collins18,19, Claire Kendall6,20,21,22, Sean B Rourke1,18,23.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Nearly half of HIV-positive patients experience mental health and substance use problems, but many do not receive adequate or ongoing mental health or addiction care. This lack of ongoing care can result in the use of costly acute care services. Prospective evaluations of the relationship between psychiatric and substance use disorders and acute care services use are lacking, and this information is needed to understand unmet needs and improve access to appropriate services.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29630615 PMCID: PMC5891004 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0195185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline characteristics by current depression and recreational drug use status (N = 3,482).
| Characteristics | Current depression (CD) and recreational drug use (RDU) status | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Without CD & RDU | With CD-only | With RDU-only | Co-occurring CD & RDU | |
| (N = 2137, 61.4%) | (N = 696, 20.0%) | (N = 396, 11.4%) | (N = 253, 7.3%) | |
| Age | ||||
| 16–29 years | 110 (5.1%) | 42 (6.0%) | 48 (12.1%) | 22 (8.7%) |
| 30–39 years | 343 (16.1%) | 143 (20.5%) | 82 (20.7%) | 67 (26.5%) |
| 40–49 years | 86 6(40.5%) | 306 (44.0%) | 178 (44.9%) | 120 (47.4%) |
| ≥ 50 years | 818 (38.3%) | 205 (29.5%) | 88 (22.2%) | 44 (17.4%) |
| Gender | ||||
| Female | 349 (16.3%) | 159 (22.8%) | 28 (7.1%) | 38 (15.0%) |
| Male | 1787 (83.6%) | 537 (77.2%) | 368 (92.9%) | 215 (85.0%) |
| Sexual orientation | ||||
| Gay, lesbian, or bisexual | 1420 (66.4%) | 422 (60.6%) | 333 (84.1%) | 168 (66.4%) |
| Heterosexual | 704 (32.9%) | 270 (38.8%) | 63 (15.9%) | 83 (33.8%) |
| Marital status | ||||
| Married / living with partner | 945 (44.2%) | 232 (33.3%) | 144 (36.4%) | 63 (24.9%) |
| Single, separated/divorced, or widowed | 1189 (55.6%) | 462 (66.4%) | 251 (63.4%) | 185 (73.1%) |
| Ethnicity | ||||
| Aboriginal | 177 (8.3%) | 80 (11.5%) | 38 (9.6%) | 44 (17.4%) |
| African, Caribbean, Asian or Latin American | 497 (23.3%) | 176 (25.3%) | 55 (13.9%) | 29 (11.5%) |
| European decent | 1457 (68.2%) | 437 (62.8%) | 301 (76.0%) | 180 (71.1%) |
| Immigration status | ||||
| Canadian immigrant | 667 (31.2%) | 232 (33.3%) | 74 (18.7%) | 43 (17.0%) |
| Canadian born | 1465 (68.6%) | 463 (66.5%) | 321 (81.1%) | 209 (82.6%) |
| Employment status | ||||
| Unemployed | 166 (7.8%) | 82 (11.8%) | 41 (10.4%) | 35 (13.8%) |
| Student/retired | 241 (11.3%) | 37 (5.3%) | 23 (5.3%) | 7 (2.8%) |
| Recipient of Ontario Disability Support Program | 541 (25.3%) | 380 (54.6%) | 112 (28.3%) | 143 (56.5%) |
| Employed | 1185 (55.5%) | 193 (27.7%) | 219 (55.3%) | 67 (26.5%) |
| Educational attainment | ||||
| Completed high school or less | 627 (29.3%) | 284 (40.8%) | 100 (25.3%) | 108 (42.7%) |
| Completed more than high school | 1510 (70.7%) | 412 (59.2%) | 296 (74.7%) | 145 (57.3%) |
| Annual household income (CAD) before withholding taxes/benefits | ||||
| < $20,000 | 433 (20.3%) | 263 (37.8%) | 82 (20.7%) | 111 (43.9%) |
| $20,000 to $39,999 | 371 (17.4%) | 160 (23.0%) | 72 (18.2%) | 37 (14.6%) |
| $40,000 to $49,999 | 323 (15.1%) | 63 (9.1%) | 40 (10.1%) | 20 (7.9%) |
| ≥ $50,000 | 829 (38.8%) | 136 (19.5%) | 162 (40.9%) | 51 (20.2%) |
| Difficulty in affording housing-related expenses | ||||
| Yes | 376 (17.6%) | 264 (37.9%) | 71 (17.9%) | 83 (32.8%) |
| No | 1761 (82.4%) | 432 (62.1%) | 325 (82.1%) | 170 (67.2%) |
| Worry about eviction | ||||
| Yes | 235 (11.0%) | 182 (26.1%) | 45 (11.4%) | 60 (23.7%) |
| No | 1901 (89.0%) | 514 (73.9%) | 351 (88.6%) | 193 (76.3%) |
| Control over housing situation | ||||
| Yes | 1732 (81.0%) | 438 (62.9%) | 317 (80.1%) | 164 (64.8%) |
| No | 405 (19.0%) | 258 (37.1%) | 79 (19.9%) | 89 (35.2%) |
| Sense of belonging to neighbourhood | ||||
| Yes | 1533 (71.7%) | 372 (53.4%) | 273 (68.9%) | 136 (53.8%) |
| No | 604 (28.3%) | 324 (46.6%) | 123 (31.1%) | 117 (46.2%) |
| Perceived good location of home | ||||
| Yes | 1725 (80.7%) | 450 (64.7%) | 324 (81.8%) | 164 (64.8%) |
| No | 412 (19.3%) | 246 (35.3%) | 72 (18.2%) | 89 (35.2%) |
| History of depression | ||||
| Yes | 673 (31.5%) | 384 (55.2%) | 153 (38.6%) | 157 (62.1%) |
| No | 1464 (68.5%) | 312 (44.8%) | 243 (61.4%) | 96 (37.9%) |
| History of alcoholism | ||||
| Yes | 152 (7.1%) | 92 (13.2%) | 65 (16.4%) | 68 (26.9%) |
| No | 1962 (91.8%) | 596 (85.6%) | 330 (83.3%) | 184 (72.7%) |
| History of drug addiction/dependence | ||||
| Yes | 308 (14.4%) | 149 (21.4%) | 126 (31.8%) | 126 (49.8%) |
| No | 1806 (84.5%) | 539 (77.4%) | 269 (67.9%) | 126 (49.8%) |
| Current smoker | ||||
| Yes | 683 (32.0%) | 325 (46.7%) | 217 (54.8%) | 176 (69.6%) |
| No | 1450 (67.9%) | 369 (53.0%) | 177 (44.7%) | 76 (30.0%) |
| Current use of combination antiretroviral Therapy | ||||
| Yes | 1865 (87.3%) | 594 (85.3%) | 313 (79.0%) | 188 (74.3%) |
| No | 272 (12.7%) | 102 (14.7%) | 83 (21.0%) | 65 (25.7%) |
| Antidepressant use | ||||
| Yes | 374 (17.5%) | 284 (40.8%) | 89 (22.5%) | 108 (42.7%) |
| No | 1763 (82.5%) | 412 (59.2%) | 307 (77.5%) | 145 (57.3%) |
| Charlson physical multi-morbidity index ≥ 1 | ||||
| Yes | 491 (23.0%) | 206 (29.6%) | 78 (19.7%) | 80 (31.6%) |
| No | 1646 (77.0%) | 490 (70.4%) | 318 (80.3%) | 173 (68.4%) |
| Recent CD4 cell count (<200 | ||||
| Yes | 190 (8.9%) | 70 (10.1%) | 44 (11.1%) | 43 (17.0%) |
| No | 1944 (91.0%) | 625 (89.8%) | 352 (88.9%) | 209 (82.6%) |
| Detectable recent viral load (>50 | ||||
| Yes | 493 (23.1%) | 191 (27.4%) | 138 (34.8%) | 126 (49.8%) |
| No | 1644 (76.9%) | 505 (72.6%) | 258 (65.2%) | 127 (50.2%) |
| Years since HIV diagnosis, median (25th to 75th percentile) | 11.7 (5.8–17.7) | 12.0 (5.4–16.8) | 8.8 (3.4–15.7) | 7.7 (3.2–14.8) |
| Physical quality-of-life (SF12v2), median (25th to 75th percentile) | 53.2 (45.4–56.7) | 46.0 (36.4–55.2) | 54.8 (47.8–7.8) | 46.2 (37.5–56.8) |
| CES-D20 | 897 (42.0%) | 242 (34.8%) | 148 (37.4%) | 54 (21.3%) |
| K10 | 1240 (58.0%) | 454 (65.2%) | 248 (62.6%) | 199 (78.7%) |
* The reference group is OCS participants without current depression and/or recreational drug use.
a Difficulty in affording house-related expenses was defined as a patient’s self-reported “Very difficult” or “Fairly difficult” to the following question: “Considering your household income, how difficult is it for you to meet your monthly housing-related costs?(Housing costs include rent/mortgage, property taxes and utilities only).”
b A 5-point Likert scale (strongly agree to strongly disagree) was used. We dichotomized their response into “yes” (strongly agree/agree) and “no” (neutral/disagree/strongly disagree).
c History of depression was defined as having a past depression-related diagnosis in OHIP records (OHIP ICD-9: 296 and 311), from the earliest available records to a year before baseline.
d History of alcoholism was defined as a diagnostic code of alcohol dependence/abuse in OHIP (ICD-9: 303) from the earliest available records to a year before baseline.
e History of drug addiction/dependence was defined as a diagnostic code of drug dependence/addiction in OHIP (ICD-9: 304) from the earliest available records to a year before baseline.
f The definition of antidepressants was based on the first line of antidepressants for managing depression in adults recommended by the Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments (CANMAT) Clinical guidelines (Lam et al., 2009).
g There are two instruments for identifying current depression administered by clinic nurses and assistants during the participant’s regular clinical appointments. Due to constraints on human resources and time in several HIV clinics, 61% of HIV-positive participants were administered the 10-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K10) and 39% were administrated the 20-item Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D20). Full details of the cohort can be found on the study website: http://www.ohtncohortstudy.ca/
Crude incidence rate (IR) per 100 person-years, crude hazard ratio (HR), and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for emergency department (ED) encounters, hospital admissions, and potentially avoidable ED encounters, whole cohort and by current depression and recreational drug use status measured at the baseline.
| ED encounters | Hospital admissions | Potentially avoidable ED encounters | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (N = 2,108) | ||||||||||
| (N = 3,482) | (N = 3,482) | Low-acuity ED encounters | Repeated ED encounters | ED encounters without seeking ambulatory care | ||||||
| IR | Crude HR Ratio | IR | Crude HR Ratio | IR | Crude HR Ratio | IR | Crude HR Ratio | IR | Crude HR Ratio | |
| (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | |
| 25.6 | 6.9 | 19.4 | 10.9 | 7.9 | ||||||
| (24.5, 26.8) | (6.4, 7.4) | (18.3, 20.6) | (10.2, 11.7) | (7.2, 8.6) | ||||||
| Current depression-only | 34.8 | 9.1 | 21.8 | 12.2 | 7.3 | 1.03 | ||||
| (31.8, 38.0) | (7.9, 10.4) | (19.4, 24.6) | (10.5, 14.1) | (6.5, 8.2) | (0.8, 1.3) | |||||
| Recreational drug use-only | 30.0 | 6.0 | 1.0 | 22.8 | 13.2 | 7.5 | ||||
| (26.4, 34.1) | (4.8, 7.6) | (0.8, 1.3) | (19.2, 27.0) | (10.8, 16.2) | (6.3, 9.0) | |||||
| Co-occurring current depressive symptoms and recreational drug use | 51.9 | 13.0 | 25.6 | 16.9 | 10.8 | 1.2 | ||||
| (44.8, 60.1) | (10.4, 16.1) | (21.1, 31.1) | (13.5, 21.1) | (8.7, 13.4) | (0.9, 1.7) | |||||
| Without current depression and recreational drug use (reference) | 21.2 | 1 | 5.9 | 1 | 17.2 | 1 | 9.4 | 1 | 9.2 | 1 |
| (20.0, 22.4) | (5.4, 6.5) | (15.8, 18.6) | (8.5, 10.3) | (6.9, 12.2) | ||||||
IR = Incidence rate
HR = Hazard ratio
CI = Confidence intervals
ED = Emergency department encounters
a Low-acuity ED encounters were identified using level four or five of the five-level Canadian triage and acuity scale (1 = resuscitation, 2 = emergency, 3 = urgent, 4 = semi-urgent, 5 = non-urgent) AND a visit disposition at discharge that indicated the participants were not transferred to inpatient care.
b Repeated ED encounters were defined by discharge date of an emergency department encounter that occurred within 30 days of a previous encounter at the same or a different facility.
c Emergency department encounters without seeking ambulatory care were defined as emergency department encounters without an ambulatory visit to a physician in the 30 days prior to the index encounter
Crude and adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for associations between depression and recreational drug use exposure and two acute care services use outcomes (N = 3,482).
| Main Exposure | Emergency Department Encounters | Hospital Admissions | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crude HR | aHR | Crude HR | aHR | |
| (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | |
| Depression-only | ||||
| Recreational Drug Use—only | 1.0 | 1.1 | ||
| (0.8, 1.3) | (0.9, 1.5) | |||
| Co-occurring depression and recreational drug use | ||||
| Without depression and recreational drug use(reference) | 1 | 1 | ||
This table contains the final set of covariates retained in the multivariable Cox proportional hazard regression models for the index emergency department encounters and hospital admissions. More information about the full model can be found in S1 Table.
aHR = Adjusted hazard ratios
CI = Confidence intervals
a There are two instruments for identifying current depression administered by clinic nurses and assistants during the participant’s regular clinical appointments. Due to constraints on human resources and time in several HIV clinics, 61% of HIV-positive participants were administered the 10-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K10) and 39% were administrated the 20-item Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D20). Full details of the cohort can be found on the study website: http://www.ohtncohortstudy.ca/
b Participants were asked whether they had used any of the following drugs for recreational or other non-medical purposes over the past six months: anabolic steroids, amphetamines, methamphetamines, cocaine, crack/freebase, club drugs, heroin, opiates, tranquilizers, or other substances.
Adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for associations between current depression and recreational drug use exposure and three potentially avoidable emergency department (ED) encounter outcomes (N = 2,108).
| Main Exposure | Low-acuity ED Encounters | Repeated ED Encounters | ED encounters without seeking ambulatory care 30 days prior to the index encounters | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crude HR | aHR | Crude HR | aHR | Crude HR | aHR | |
| (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | |
| Depression-only | 1.03 | 0.97 | ||||
| (0.8, 1.3) | (0.8, 1.3) | |||||
| Recreational drug use -only | ||||||
| Co-occurring depression and recreational drug use | 1.2 | 0.9 | ||||
| (0.9, 1.7) | (0.7, 1.4) | |||||
| Without depression and recreational drug use (reference) | 1 | 1 | 1 | |||
This table contains the final set of covariates retained in the multivariable Cox proportional hazard regression models for the three potentially avoidable emergency department encounter outcomes. More information about the full model can be found in S2 Table.
aHR = Adjusted hazard ratios
CI = Confidence intervals
a Low-acuity ED encounters were identified using level four or five of the five-level Canadian triage and acuity scale (1 = resuscitation, 2 = emergency, 3 = urgent, 4 = semi-urgent, 5 = non-urgent) AND a visit disposition at discharge that indicated that participants were not transferred to inpatient care.
b Repeated ED encounters were defined by discharge date of an emergency department encounter that occurred within 30 days of a previous encounter at the same or a different facility.
c Emergency department encounters without seeking ambulatory care were defined as emergency department encounters without an ambulatory visit to a physician in the 30 days prior to the index encounter.
d There are two instruments for identifying current depression administered by clinic nurses and assistants during the participant’s regular clinical appointments. Due to constraints on human resources and time in several HIV clinics, 61% of HIV-positive participants were administered the 10-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K10) and 39% were administrated the 20-item Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D20). Full details of the cohort can be found on the study website: http://www.ohtncohortstudy.ca/
e Participants were asked whether they had used any of the following drugs for recreational or other non-medical purposes over the past six months: anabolic steroids, amphetamines, methamphetamines, cocaine, crack/freebase, club drugs, heroin, opiates, tranquilizers, or other substances