Community partners in care: 6- and 12-month outcomes of community engagement versus technical assistance to implement depression collaborative care among depressed older adults
Article
Izquierdo, A, Ong, M, Pulido, E et al. (2018). Community partners in care: 6- and 12-month outcomes of community engagement versus technical assistance to implement depression collaborative care among depressed older adults
. ETHNICITY & DISEASE, 28 339-348. 10.18865/ed.28.S2.339
Izquierdo, A, Ong, M, Pulido, E et al. (2018). Community partners in care: 6- and 12-month outcomes of community engagement versus technical assistance to implement depression collaborative care among depressed older adults
. ETHNICITY & DISEASE, 28 339-348. 10.18865/ed.28.S2.339
Objective: Community Partners in Care, a community-partnered, cluster-randomized trial with depressed clients from 95 Los Angeles health and community programs, examined the added value of a community coalition approach (Community Engagement and Planning [CEP]) versus individual program technical assistance (Resources for Services [RS]) to implement depression collaborative care in underserved communities. This exploratory subanalysis examines 6- and 12-month outcomes among CPIC participants aged >50 years. Design: Community-partnered, cluster-randomized trial conducted between April 2010 and March 2012. Setting: Hollywood-Metropolitan (HM) and South Los Angeles (SLA) Service Planning Areas (SPAs), Los Angeles, California Participants: 394 participants aged >50 years with depressive symptoms (8-item Patient Health Questionnaire score ≥ 10). Intervention: A community-partnered multi-sector coalition approach (Community Engagement and Planning [CEP]) vs individual program technical assistance (Resources for Services [RS]) to implement depression collaborative care. Main Outcome Measures: Depressive symptoms (PHQ-8 score), mental health-related quality of life (MHRQL), community-prioritized outcomes including mental wellness, homelessness risk and physical activity, and services utilization. Results: At 6 months, CEP was more effective than RS at improving MHRQL and mental wellness among participants aged >50 years; no differences were found in the effects of CEP vs RS on other outcomes. No significant outcome differences between CEP and RS were found at 12 months. Conclusions: A multisector community coalition approach may offer additional benefits over individual program technical assistance to improve outcomes among depressed adults aged >50 years living in underserved communities.