
@article{ref1,
title="The Effects of Quality Improvement for Depression in Primary Care at Nine Years: Results from a Randomized, Controlled Group‐Level Trial",
journal="Health services research",
year="2008",
author="Wells, Kenneth B. and Tang, Lingqi and Miranda, Jeanne and Benjamin, Bernadette and Duan, Naihua and Sherbourne, Cathy D.",
volume="43",
number="6",
pages="1952-1974",
abstract="<p><b>Objective. </b> To examine 9‐year outcomes of implementation of short‐term quality improvement (QI) programs for depression in primary care.</p> <p><b>Data Sources. </b> Depressed primary care patients from six U.S. health care organizations.</p> <p><b>Study Design. </b> Group‐level, randomized controlled trial.</p> <p><b>Data Collection. </b> Patients were randomly assigned to short‐term QI programs supporting education and resources for medication management (QI‐Meds) or access to evidence‐based psychotherapy (QI‐Therapy); and usual care (UC). Of 1,088 eligible patients, 805 (74 percent) completed 9‐year follow‐up; results were extrapolated to 1,269 initially enrolled and living. Outcomes were psychological well‐being (Mental Health Inventory, five‐item version [MHI5]), unmet need, services use, and intermediate outcomes.</p> <p><b>Principal Findings. </b> At 9 years, there were no overall intervention status effects on MHI5 or unmet need (largest <i>F</i> (2,41)=2.34, <i>p</i>=.11), but relative to UC, QI‐Meds worsened MHI5, reduced effectiveness of coping and among whites lowered tangible social support (smallest <i>t</i>(42)=2.02, <i>p</i>=.05). The interventions reduced outpatient visits and increased perceived barriers to care among whites, but reduced attitudinal barriers due to racial discrimination and other factors among minorities (smallest <i>F</i> (2,41)=3.89, <i>p</i>=.03).</p> <p><b>Conclusions. </b> Main intervention effects were over but the results suggest some unintended negative consequences at 9 years particularly for the medication‐resource intervention and shifts to greater perceived barriers among whites yet reduced attitudinal barriers among minorities.</p><p />",
language="",
issn="0017-9124",
doi="10.1111/j.1475-6773.2008.00871.x",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2008.00871.x"
}