Affiliation:
1. Dartmouth Medical School, New Hampshire
2. The Institute for Clinical Outcomes Research, Utah
3. Loyola College, Maryland
Abstract
Objective:To examine whether older HMO patients with depression are treated differently than younger patients in terms of diagnosis, treatment by specialty provider, and pharmacotherapy.Design:Chart-review, Cross sectional study.Settings and Participants:Patients were selected from six HMOs in the United States who had one or more of five medical diagnoses: arthritis, asthma, otitis media, epigastric pain/ulcer, and hypertension, ( n = 9143). From this group, chart diagnoses and pharmacy records were used to identify patients who also had a diagnosis of depression ( n = 416) or who had a diagnosis of depression and/or treatment with antidepressant medication ( n = 1286).Measurements:Medical records and computerized service and pharmacy records were reviewed to obtain diagnoses, office visits by provider type, and psychiatric medication prescription counts.Results:Significant differences were found in treatment of depression for older versus younger patients. Although depression was identified at a similar rate for both groups, older patients received fewer mental health specialty visits and fewer prescriptions for SSRI antidepressants. Older patients with a diagnosis of depression were more likely to be treated with benzodiazepines (49.2% of older vs. 33.2% of younger) though they were less likely to receive long half-life benzodiazepines.Conclusions:Psychotropic medication management is an important target for improving quality of care for older patients with depression in HMOs. Decreasing inefficient minor tranquilizer use and increasing use of newer antidepressant medications may lead to improved outcomes for older depressed adults.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
53 articles.
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