Policy makers do not know how to alter the structure and process of primary care to provide treatment which will improve and sustain improvement in the functional impairment associated with major depression, the fourth leading cause of disability worldwide. To address this problem, we propose an R-10 to fund Quality Improvement for Depression (QID).
The specific aims of QID are: (1) to provide integrated analyses of the long term impact of four distinct but related primary care interventions to improve depression treatment during the acute, continuation, and maintenance phase of care; and (2) to estimate the effects of high quality primary care depression treatment on long term disability. In the early stages of QID collaboration, funded investigators of four separately conceived quality improvement interventions planned and implemented a coordinated strategy for recruitment, intervention, and data collection in 108 primary care clinics in network and staff model HMOs, IPAs, PPOs, and mixed model settings. In addition to common baseline organizational and provider data, QID investigators are collecting over 80 common variables from 1,980 patients with major depression at each of three waves across the first year. This application seeks support to conduct effectiveness analyses in the combined database after standardizing patient follow-up during the second year across the four projects. This effort is needed to understand the """"""""big picture"""""""" of how four dissemination interventions which are feasible to integrate across a variety of practice settings and populations, impact the quality and outcome of care, with sufficient power to determine whether they improve outcomes over a duration meaningful to policy makers. The analyses will inform policy debates about effective mental health treatment by providing generalizable estimates of the effect of antidepressant medication and psychotherapy on disability over the long term. To address these policy questions through the QID is more efficient than funding another large new project and more scientifically rigorous than drawing conclusions from heterogeneous studies whose differing methodologies complicate meta- analytic methods and conclusions. In addition to serving as a competing continuation for the Depression Guidelines Cooperative Agreement, QID serves as an important model of how mental health effectiveness research can be efficiently conducted by intensive collaboration of independently funded projects.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01MH054443-06
Application #
6186454
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1-CRB-W (01))
Program Officer
Gonzales, Junius J
Project Start
1994-09-30
Project End
2003-05-31
Budget Start
2000-06-01
Budget End
2001-05-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$268,367
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
045911138
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
Rost, Kathryn; Dickinson, L Miriam; Fortney, John et al. (2005) Clinical improvement associated with conformance to HEDIS-based depression care. Ment Health Serv Res 7:103-12
Rost, Kathryn; Fortney, John; Coyne, James (2005) The relationship of depression treatment quality indicators to employee absenteeism. Ment Health Serv Res 7:161-9
Rost, K M; Duan, N; Rubenstein, L V et al. (2001) The Quality Improvement for Depression collaboration: general analytic strategies for a coordinated study of quality improvement in depression care. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 23:239-53