| Literature DB >> 32560678 |
Fraser W Gaspar1, Kerri Wizner2, Joshua Morrison2, Carolyn S Dewa3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Depression is the greatest contributor to worldwide disability. The purpose of this study was to understand the influence of antidepressant and psychotherapy treatment adherence on future work leaves for patients with major depressive disorder.Entities:
Keywords: Absence; Guidelines; Medication; Mental health; Psychiatric services; Risk prediction; Short-term disability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32560678 PMCID: PMC7304154 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-020-02731-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Flow chart depicting study population inclusion criteria
Demographics of study populations, number in category (%)
| Categories | All, |
|---|---|
| Mild depression | 5618 (21.4%) |
| Moderate depression | 13,259 (50.5%) |
| Severe depression without psychotic behavior | 7379 (28.1%) |
| Female | 14,532 (55.3%) |
| Male | 11,724 (44.7%) |
| Construction | 14 (0.1%) |
| Finance, insurance, real estate | 7039 (26.8%) |
| Manufacturing, durable goods | 5393 (20.5%) |
| Manufacturing, nondurable goods | 2224 (8.5%) |
| Oil & gas extraction, mining | 82 (0.3%) |
| Retail trade | 1211 (4.6%) |
| Services | 3665 (14.0%) |
| Transportation, communications, utilities | 6460 (24.6%) |
| Wholesale | 81 (0.3%) |
| Missing | 87 (0.3%) |
| No | 11,083 (42.2%) |
| Yes | 10,154 (38.7%) |
| Missing | 5019 (19.1%) |
| No | 18,551 (70.7%) |
| Yes | 5973 (22.7%) |
| Missing | 1732 (6.6%) |
| Consumer-driven health plan | 2658 (10.1%) |
| Comprehensive | 637 (2.4%) |
| Exclusive provider organization | 294 (1.1%) |
| High-deductible health plan | 1412 (5.4%) |
| Health maintenance organization | 3030 (11.5%) |
| Point-of-service plan | 2761 (10.5%) |
| Preferred provider organization | 15,279 (58.2%) |
| Missing | 185 (0.7%) |
| No | 23,926 (91.1%) |
| Yes | 2330 (8.9%) |
Counts (%) of patients receiving antidepressant and psychotherapy treatment by population subset. Work leaves do not include pregnancy-related work leaves
| Antidepressant treatment | Psychotherapy treatment | Work leave in acute phase, | Work leave after acute phase, | No work leave in follow-up period, |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | No | 211 (3.8%) | 81 (3.5%) | 629 (3.4%) |
| No | Non-adherent | 852 (15.2%) | 643 (28%) | 5043 (27.5%) |
| No | Adherent | 772 (13.8%) | 338 (14.7%) | 3688 (20.1%) |
| Non-adherent | No | 572 (10.2%) | 365 (15.9%) | 2440 (13.3%) |
| Non-adherent | Non-adherent | 1100 (19.6%) | 304 (13.2%) | 2001 (10.9%) |
| Non-adherent | Adherent | 1180 (21.1%) | 160 (7%) | 1297 (7.1%) |
| Adherent | No | 213 (3.8%) | 205 (8.9%) | 1560 (8.5%) |
| Adherent | Non-adherent | 265 (4.7%) | 130 (5.7%) | 1030 (5.6%) |
| Adherent | Adherent | 435 (7.8%) | 74 (3.2%) | 668 (3.6%) |
Fig. 2Kaplan-Meier curves assessing the association between antidepressant and psychotherapy adherence with time to a non-pregnancy work leave. P-values are calculated from chi-squared log rank tests between treatment groups
Results from multiple variable Cox proportional hazards models testing the influence of antidepressant and psychotherapy treatment on work leaves. Full model results including covariates presented in Supporting Information Tables S2-S6
| Reference Group | Treatment Group (no = 0, yes = 1) | Hazard Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-adherent to both antidepressant and psychotherapy treatmenta | Adherent to either antidepressant or psychotherapy treatmenta | 0.84 | 0.77–0.91 | 0.0001 |
| No antidepressant treatment | Non-adherent to antidepressant treatment | 1.22 | 1.11–1.35 | 0.0001 |
| Adherent to antidepressant treatment | 1.13 | 1.01–1.27 | 0.0273 | |
| Non-adherent to antidepressant treatmentb | Adherent to antidepressant treatmentb | 0.92 | 0.82–1.03 | 0.1439 |
| No psychotherapy treatment | Non-adherent to psychotherapy treatment | 0.91 | 0.81–1.02 | 0.0997 |
| Adherent to psychotherapy treatment | 0.72 | 0.64–0.82 | < 0.0001 | |
| Non-adherent to psychotherapy treatmentc | Adherent to psychotherapy treatmentc | 0.80 | 0.73–0.89 | < 0.0001 |
a Analysis excludes patients without antidepressant or psychotherapy treatment
b Analysis excludes patients without antidepressant treatment
c Analysis excludes patients without psychotherapy treatment