Collaborative Care for Patients with Depression and Chronic Illnesses
Abstract
Patients with depression and poorly controlled diabetes, coronary heart disease, or both have an increased risk of adverse outcomes and high health care costs. We conducted a study to determine whether coordinated care management of multiple conditions improves disease control in these patients.
We conducted a single-blind, randomized, controlled trial in 14 primary care clinics in an integrated health care system in Washington State, involving 214 participants with poorly controlled diabetes, coronary heart disease, or both and coexisting depression. Patients were randomly assigned to the usual-care group or to the intervention group, in which a medically supervised nurse, working with each patient's primary care physician, provided guideline-based, collaborative care management, with the goal of controlling risk factors associated with multiple diseases. The primary outcome was based on simultaneous modeling of glycated hemoglobin, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and systolic blood-pressure levels and Symptom Checklist-20 (SCL-20) depression outcomes at 12 months; this modeling allowed estimation of a single overall treatment effect.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 60.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 35
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Glycated hemoglobin
- Collaborative Care
- Blood pressure
- Depression (economics)
- Internal medicine
- Diabetes mellitus
- Randomized controlled trial
- Good health and well-being