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Comparative Effectiveness of Coalitions Versus Technical Assistance for Depression Quality Improvement in Persons with Multiple Chronic Conditions.
- Springgate, Benjamin;
- Tang, Lingqi;
- Ong, Michael;
- Aoki, Wayne;
- Chung, Bowen;
- Dixon, Elizabeth;
- Johnson, Megan Dwight;
- Jones, Felica;
- Landry, Craig;
- Lizaola, Elizabeth;
- Mtume, Norma;
- Ngo, Victoria K;
- Pulido, Esmeralda;
- Sherbourne, Cathy;
- Wright, Aziza Lucas;
- Whittington, Yolanda;
- Williams, Pluscedia;
- Zhang, Lily;
- Miranda, Jeanne;
- Belin, Thomas;
- Gilmore, James;
- Jones, Loretta;
- Wells, Kenneth B
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.18865/ed.28.s2.325Abstract
Significance
Prior research suggests that Community Engagement and Planning (CEP) for coalition support compared with Resources for Services (RS) for program technical assistance to implement depression quality improvement programs improves 6- and 12-month client mental-health related quality of life (MHRQL); however, effects for clients with multiple chronic medical conditions (MCC) are unknown.Objective
To explore effectiveness of CEP vs RS in MCC and non-MCC subgroups.Design
Secondary analyses of a cluster-randomized trial.Setting
93 health care and community-based programs in two neighborhoods.Participants
Of 4,440 clients screened, 1,322 depressed (Patient Health Questionnaire, PHQ8) provided contact information, 1,246 enrolled and 1,018 (548 with ≥3 MCC) completed baseline, 6- or 12-month surveys.Intervention
CEP or RS for implementing depression quality improvement programs.Outcomes and analyses
Primary: depression (PHQ9 <10), poor MHRQL (Short Form Health Survey, SF-12<40); Secondary: mental wellness, good physical health, behavioral health hospitalization, chronic homelessness risk, work/workloss days, services use at 6 and 12 months. End-point regressions were used to estimate intervention effects on outcomes for subgroups with ≥3 MCC, non-MCC, and intervention-by-MCC interactions (exploratory).Results
Among MCC clients at 6 months, CEP vs RS lowered likelihoods of depression and poor MHRQL; increased likelihood of mental wellness; reduced work-loss days among employed and likelihoods of ≥4 behavioral-health hospitalization nights and chronic homelessness risk, while increasing faith-based and park community center depression services; and at 12 months, likelihood of good physical health and park community center depression services use (each P<.05). There were no significant interactions or primary outcome effects for non-MCC.Conclusions
CEP was more effective than RS in improving 6-month primary outcomes among depressed MCC clients, without significant interactions.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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