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Collaborative Care Helps Teenagers Fight Depression

by Thilaka Ravi on Aug 27 2014 8:35 PM

Collaborative Care Helps Teenagers Fight Depression
How best to care for the many adolescents who have depression? A recent trial found collaborative care intervention in a primary care setting was better than the usual care in helping teens overcome depression.
In a collaborative care intervention, a care manager continually reached out to teens—delivering and following up on treatment in a primary-care setting (the office of a pediatrician or family doctor, not a psychiatrist or psychologist) at Group Health Cooperative. Depression outcomes after a year were significantly better with this approach than with usual care, a randomized controlled trial published in JAMA revealed.

Depression is common in adolescents: Up to one in five have major depression by age 18. Depressed youth are at greater risk of suicide, substance abuse, early pregnancy, dropping out of school, recurrent depression, and poor long-term health.

"Proven treatments are available, including medications and psychotherapy," said Laura P. Richardson, MD, MPH, an investigator at Seattle Children's Research Institute Center for Child Health, Development, and Behavior, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington (UW) School of Medicine, and an affiliate investigator at Group Health Research Institute. "But most American teens with depression don't get any treatment for it. We want to change that."

The joint Seattle Children's–Group Health–UW study was called Reaching Out to Adolescents in Distress (ROAD). In the study, 101 teens age 13-17 who were depressed on screening at nine Group Health Medical Centers in Washington state were randomly assigned to receive either collaborative care or the care that they would usually receive. With usual care, teens received their depression screening results and could get mental health services at Group Health.

In the collaborative care intervention, a depression care manager was based in the primary care doctor's practice. The care manager educated and helped each teen and their parents make individual decisions about treatment. Then the care manager either provided brief cognitive behavioral therapy sessions or worked with the teen's doctor to choose and initiate an antidepressant medication.

"For adolescents, as for adults, depression can make it difficult to seek help and follow through," Dr. Richardson said. "That's why it's so important that the care manager reached out to the teens regularly to see whether they were improving—and met weekly with a mental health specialist supervisor to review how the patients were responding to care." For youth whose depression didn't respond to the initial treatment, the care manager stepped up the treatment, following a proven protocol.

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The results: At one year, depressed teens who received collaborative care were more likely to receive evidence-based treatment, and they had more decreases in depressive symptoms, using a commonly used measure of depression, compared with those who received usual care.

"The body and mind are intimately connected," Dr. Richardson added. "So it makes good sense to organize treatment for depression in this way, integrating care for mental and physical health within primary care."

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Collaborative care for depression has been proven in more than 70 randomized controlled trials in adults, including TEAMcare, involving some of the same researchers. But only two studies had previously tested collaborative care for depression in teens, with mixed results.

Next, the research team will work to develop strategies to support clinics that are interested in implementing this model in practice.



Source-Eurekalert


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