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Targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the AMEP2 study

BACKGROUND: Depression in primary care is common, yet this costly and disabling condition remains underdiagnosed and undertreated. Persisting gaps in the primary care of depression are due in part to patients’ reluctance to bring depressive symptoms to the attention of their primary care clinician a...

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Autores principales: Tancredi, Daniel J, Slee, Christina K, Jerant, Anthony, Franks, Peter, Nettiksimmons, Jasmine, Cipri, Camille, Gottfeld, Dustin, Huerta, Julia, Feldman, Mitchell D, Jackson-Triche, Maja, Kelly-Reif, Steven, Hudnut, Andrew, Olson, Sarah, Shelton, Janie, Kravitz, Richard L
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3637592/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23594572
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-141
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author Tancredi, Daniel J
Slee, Christina K
Jerant, Anthony
Franks, Peter
Nettiksimmons, Jasmine
Cipri, Camille
Gottfeld, Dustin
Huerta, Julia
Feldman, Mitchell D
Jackson-Triche, Maja
Kelly-Reif, Steven
Hudnut, Andrew
Olson, Sarah
Shelton, Janie
Kravitz, Richard L
author_facet Tancredi, Daniel J
Slee, Christina K
Jerant, Anthony
Franks, Peter
Nettiksimmons, Jasmine
Cipri, Camille
Gottfeld, Dustin
Huerta, Julia
Feldman, Mitchell D
Jackson-Triche, Maja
Kelly-Reif, Steven
Hudnut, Andrew
Olson, Sarah
Shelton, Janie
Kravitz, Richard L
author_sort Tancredi, Daniel J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Depression in primary care is common, yet this costly and disabling condition remains underdiagnosed and undertreated. Persisting gaps in the primary care of depression are due in part to patients’ reluctance to bring depressive symptoms to the attention of their primary care clinician and, when depression is diagnosed, to accept initial treatment for the condition. Both targeted and tailored communication strategies offer promise for fomenting discussion and reducing barriers to appropriate initial treatment of depression. METHODS/DESIGN: The Activating Messages to Enhance Primary Care Practice (AMEP2) Study is a stratified randomized controlled trial comparing two computerized multimedia patient interventions --- one targeted (to patient gender and income level) and one tailored (to level of depressive symptoms, visit agenda, treatment preferences, depression causal attributions, communication self-efficacy and stigma)--- and an attention control. AMEP2 consists of two linked sub-studies, one focusing on patients with significant depressive symptoms (Patient Health Questionnaire-9 [PHQ-9] scores ≥ 5), the other on patients with few or no depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 < 5). The first sub-study examined effectiveness of the interventions; key outcomes included delivery of components of initial depression care (antidepressant prescription or mental health referral). The second sub-study tracked potential hazards (clinical distraction and overtreatment). A telephone interview screening procedure assessed patients for eligibility and oversampled patients with significant depressive symptoms. Sampled, consenting patients used computers to answer survey questions, be randomized, and view assigned interventions just before scheduled primary care office visits. Patient surveys were also collected immediately post-visit and 12 weeks later. Physicians completed brief reporting forms after each patient’s index visit. Additional data were obtained from medical record abstraction and visit audio recordings. Of 6,191 patients assessed, 867 were randomized and included in analysis, with 559 in the first sub-study and 308 in the second. DISCUSSION: Based on formative research, we developed two novel multimedia programs for encouraging patients to discuss depressive symptoms with their primary care clinicians. Our computer-based enrollment and randomization procedures ensured that randomization was fully concealed and data missingness minimized. Analyses will focus on the interventions’ potential benefits among depressed persons, and the potential hazards among the non-depressed. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicialTrials.gov Identifier: http://NCT01144104
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spelling pubmed-36375922013-04-28 Targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the AMEP2 study Tancredi, Daniel J Slee, Christina K Jerant, Anthony Franks, Peter Nettiksimmons, Jasmine Cipri, Camille Gottfeld, Dustin Huerta, Julia Feldman, Mitchell D Jackson-Triche, Maja Kelly-Reif, Steven Hudnut, Andrew Olson, Sarah Shelton, Janie Kravitz, Richard L BMC Health Serv Res Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Depression in primary care is common, yet this costly and disabling condition remains underdiagnosed and undertreated. Persisting gaps in the primary care of depression are due in part to patients’ reluctance to bring depressive symptoms to the attention of their primary care clinician and, when depression is diagnosed, to accept initial treatment for the condition. Both targeted and tailored communication strategies offer promise for fomenting discussion and reducing barriers to appropriate initial treatment of depression. METHODS/DESIGN: The Activating Messages to Enhance Primary Care Practice (AMEP2) Study is a stratified randomized controlled trial comparing two computerized multimedia patient interventions --- one targeted (to patient gender and income level) and one tailored (to level of depressive symptoms, visit agenda, treatment preferences, depression causal attributions, communication self-efficacy and stigma)--- and an attention control. AMEP2 consists of two linked sub-studies, one focusing on patients with significant depressive symptoms (Patient Health Questionnaire-9 [PHQ-9] scores ≥ 5), the other on patients with few or no depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 < 5). The first sub-study examined effectiveness of the interventions; key outcomes included delivery of components of initial depression care (antidepressant prescription or mental health referral). The second sub-study tracked potential hazards (clinical distraction and overtreatment). A telephone interview screening procedure assessed patients for eligibility and oversampled patients with significant depressive symptoms. Sampled, consenting patients used computers to answer survey questions, be randomized, and view assigned interventions just before scheduled primary care office visits. Patient surveys were also collected immediately post-visit and 12 weeks later. Physicians completed brief reporting forms after each patient’s index visit. Additional data were obtained from medical record abstraction and visit audio recordings. Of 6,191 patients assessed, 867 were randomized and included in analysis, with 559 in the first sub-study and 308 in the second. DISCUSSION: Based on formative research, we developed two novel multimedia programs for encouraging patients to discuss depressive symptoms with their primary care clinicians. Our computer-based enrollment and randomization procedures ensured that randomization was fully concealed and data missingness minimized. Analyses will focus on the interventions’ potential benefits among depressed persons, and the potential hazards among the non-depressed. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicialTrials.gov Identifier: http://NCT01144104 BioMed Central 2013-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3637592/ /pubmed/23594572 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-141 Text en Copyright © 2013 Tancredi et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Tancredi, Daniel J
Slee, Christina K
Jerant, Anthony
Franks, Peter
Nettiksimmons, Jasmine
Cipri, Camille
Gottfeld, Dustin
Huerta, Julia
Feldman, Mitchell D
Jackson-Triche, Maja
Kelly-Reif, Steven
Hudnut, Andrew
Olson, Sarah
Shelton, Janie
Kravitz, Richard L
Targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the AMEP2 study
title Targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the AMEP2 study
title_full Targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the AMEP2 study
title_fullStr Targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the AMEP2 study
title_full_unstemmed Targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the AMEP2 study
title_short Targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the AMEP2 study
title_sort targeted versus tailored multimedia patient engagement to enhance depression recognition and treatment in primary care: randomized controlled trial protocol for the amep2 study
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3637592/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23594572
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-141
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