Primary care mental health integration to improve early treatment engagement for veterans who screen positive for depression

Author:

Leung Lucinda B.123ORCID,Chu Karen1,Rose Danielle E.1,Stockdale Susan E.1,Post Edward P.45,Funderburk Jennifer S.36,Rubenstein Lisa V.27

Affiliation:

1. Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation, & Policy, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System Los Angeles California USA

2. Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Los Angeles California USA

3. Center for Integrated Healthcare Syracuse VA Medical Center Syracuse New York USA

4. VA Ann Arbor, Center for Clinical Management Research Ann Arbor Michigan USA

5. Department of Medicine University of Michigan Medical School Ann Arbor Michigan USA

6. Department of Psychology Syracuse University Syracuse New York USA

7. RAND Corporation Santa Monica California USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo examine the relationship between the penetration (or reach) of a national program aiming to integrate mental health clinicians into all primary care clinics (PC‐MHI) and rates of guideline‐concordant follow‐up and treatment among clinic patients newly identified with depression in the Veterans Health Administration (VA).Data Sources/Study Setting15,155 screen‐positive patients 607,730 patients with 2‐item Patient Health Questionnaire scores in 82 primary care clinics, 2015–2019.Study DesignIn this retrospective cohort study, we used established depression care quality measures to assess primary care patients who (a) newly screened positive (score ≥3) and (b) were identified with depression by clinicians via diagnosis and/or medication (n = 15,155; 15,650 patient‐years). Timely follow‐up included ≥3 mental health, ≥3 psychotherapy, or ≥3 primary care visits for depression. Minimally appropriate treatment included ≥4 mental health visits, ≥3 psychotherapy, or ≥60 days of medication. In multivariate regressions, we examined whether higher rates of PC‐MHI penetration in clinic (proportion of total primary care patients in a clinic who saw any PC‐MHI clinician) were associated with greater depression care quality among cohort patients, adjusting for year, healthcare system, and patient and clinic characteristics.Data Collection/Extraction MethodsElectronic health record data from 82 VA clinics across three states.Principal FindingsA median of 9% of all primary care patients were seen by any PC‐MHI clinician annually. In fully adjusted models, greater PC‐MHI penetration was associated with timely depression follow‐up within 84 days (∆P = 0.5; SE = 0.1; p < 0.001) and 180 days (∆P = 0.3; SE = 0.1; p = 0.01) of a positive depression screen. Completion of at least minimal treatment within 12 months was high (77%), on average, and not associated with PC‐MHI penetration.ConclusionsGreater PC‐MHI program penetration was associated with early depression treatment engagement at 84−/180‐days among clinic patients newly identified with depression, with no effect on already high rates of completion of minimally sufficient treatment within the year.

Publisher

Wiley

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