The long-term trajectory of depression among Latinos in primary care and its relationship to depression care disparities Article

Interian, A, Ang, A, Gara, MA et al. (2011). The long-term trajectory of depression among Latinos in primary care and its relationship to depression care disparities . 33(2), 94-101. 10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2010.12.001

cited authors

  • Interian, A; Ang, A; Gara, MA; Rodriguez, MA; Vega, WA

authors

abstract

  • Objective: Lower use of medication treatment, poorer doctor-patient communication (DPC) and depression stigma are key contributors to mental healthcare disparities among Latinos with depression. The current study investigated the relationship between these key variables and the long-term trajectory of depression in primary care among Latinos. Method: Participants (N = 220) were Latinos presenting to primary care who screened positive for depression. A repeated measures design was used to assess participants at baseline and 6, 25 and 30 months. Repeated measures included depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9), self-reported quality of DPC and stigma pertaining to antidepressants. Using growth curve modeling, participants' depressive symptom trajectories were examined for a 30-month period. Self-reported utilization of antidepressants, DPC and antidepressant stigma were examined as predictors of the depressive symptom trajectory. In addition, rates of depression improvement/remission and recurrence/relapse were examined. Results: Improvement/remission was experienced by 69.4% of participants during a 30-month period. Among those who improved/remitted at 6 or 25 months, 63.4% maintained that improvement/remission by 30 months. The long-term trajectory of depressive symptoms demonstrated a significant positive association with antidepressant stigma and significant negative associations with use of antidepressant treatment and quality DPC. Conclusions: While relapse/recurrence is common, most Latinos in this study experienced improvement in depression over 30 months. For many, there is a considerable time to reach improvement/remission. Also, these findings confirm the significance of antidepressant underutilization, DPC and stigma in the long-term outcome of depression among Latinos in primary care. © 2011.

publication date

  • March 1, 2011

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 94

end page

  • 101

volume

  • 33

issue

  • 2