The effect of adherence to practice guidelines on depression outcomes.
The effect of adherence to practice guidelines on depression outcomes.
Ann Intern Med. 2007 Sep 4;147(5):320-9
Authors: Hepner KA, Rowe M, Rost K, Hickey SC, Sherbourne CD, Ford DE, Meredith LS, Rubenstein LV
BACKGROUND: Few studies have assessed clinician adherence to depression practice guidelines and the relationship between clinician adherence and depression outcomes. OBJECTIVE: To estimate how frequently specific guideline recommendations are followed and to assess whether following guideline recommendations is linked to improved depression outcomes. DESIGN: Observational analysis of data collected from 1996 to 1998 in 3 randomized clinical trials. SETTING: 45 primary care practices in 13 U.S. states. PATIENTS: 1131 primary care patients with depression. MEASUREMENTS: Expert panel methods were used to develop a patient survey-based index that measured adherence to clinical practice guidelines on depression. Rates of adherence to the 20 indicators that form the index were evaluated. Multivariable regression that controlled for case mix was used to assess how index scores predicted continuous and dichotomous depression measures at 12, 18, and 24 months. RESULTS: Quality of care was high (clinician adherence > or =79%) for 6 indicators, including primary care clinician detection of depression. Quality of care was low (adherence, 20% to 38%) for 8 indicators, including management of suicide risk (3 indicators), alcohol abuse (2 indicators), and elderly patients; assessment of symptoms and history of depression; and treatment adjustment for patients who did not respond to initial treatment. Greater adherence to practice guidelines significantly predicted fewer depressive symptoms on continuous measures (P
PMID: 17785487 [PubMed - in process]
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