Panic and generalized anxiety disorders (PD/GAD) are prevalent in primary care practice; responsible for significant morbidity; inadequately recognized and treated; and associated with excessive health services utilization. Given the availability of efficacious treatments for PD/GAD, this effectiveness study hypothesizes that enabling patients to participate in their care while simultaneously disseminating guideline-based treatments to their primary care physicians (PCP) via electronic medical record (EMR) will produce superior clinical outcomes to those achieved by simply notifying the physician and patient of the diagnosis alone. Our patient intervention will be based on public-domain and commercially available information/self-management materials modified for local use. PCPs will receive treatment advice based on the American Psychiatric Association's anxiety guideline and other evidence-based treatment algorithms presented to them via EMR. Approximately 20 board-certified PCPs at two study sites will be randomized to either our intervention or control ( usual care ) group. Research assistants using a validated rapid screening and interview procedure will identify 247 patients experiencing PD/GAD upon presentation for primary care over an 18-month period. All study patients and PCPs will receive notification of the anxiety diagnosis from the investigators. Afterwards, according to PCP assignment: (1) patients may receive additional information on anxiety disorders and a structured anxiety self-management program administered over the telephone by a trained facilitator; and (2) PCPs may be exposed to guideline advice presented via EMR at the time of the clinical encounter. A research assistant blinded to the PCPs randomization status will conduct standardized telephone assessments with each study patient at 0, 2, 4, 8, and 12 months. The primary outcome criterion, a 50 percent reduction in subjects' levels of anxiety symptomatology at 4 months, will be assessed using the Hamilton Rating Scale for Anxiety. Secondary outcome criteria, such as functional status and health services utilization, will be assessed using parallel analyses at 12 months. This study will enhance our understanding of new methods to implement guideline-based care and the magnitude of benefits that can be expected. Study findings can: identify process factors that contribute to appropriate and effective care; stimulate the development of other patient self-management strategies; and distinguish patient subgroups most likely to respond to a collaborative-management approach for treatment of a debilitating chronic mental disorder.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01MH059395-01A1
Application #
2908656
Study Section
Services Research Review Committee (SER)
Program Officer
Rupp, Agnes
Project Start
1999-09-10
Project End
2003-05-31
Budget Start
1999-09-10
Budget End
2000-05-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1999
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pittsburgh
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
053785812
City
Pittsburgh
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
15213
Morone, Natalia E; Belnap, Bea Herbeck; He, Fanyin et al. (2013) Pain adversely affects outcomes to a collaborative care intervention for anxiety in primary care. J Gen Intern Med 28:58-66
Teh, Carrie Farmer; Morone, Natalia E; Karp, Jordan F et al. (2009) Pain interference impacts response to treatment for anxiety disorders. Depress Anxiety 26:222-8
Andreescu, Carmen; Belnap, Bea Herbeck; Rollman, Bruce L et al. (2008) Generalized anxiety disorder severity scale validation in older adults. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 16:813-8
Shear, Katherine; Belnap, Bea Herbeck; Mazumdar, Sati et al. (2006) Generalized anxiety disorder severity scale (GADSS): a preliminary validation study. Depress Anxiety 23:77-82
Rollman, Bruce L; Belnap, Bea Herbeck; Mazumdar, Sati et al. (2005) Symptomatic severity of PRIME-MD diagnosed episodes of panic and generalized anxiety disorder in primary care. J Gen Intern Med 20:623-8
Coyne, J C; Brown, G; Datto, C et al. (2001) The benefits of a broader perspective in case-finding for disease management of depression: early lessons from the PROSPECT Study. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 16:570-6