How quality improvement interventions for depression affect stigma concerns over time: A nine-year follow-up study Article

Klap, R, Tang, L, Schell, T et al. (2009). How quality improvement interventions for depression affect stigma concerns over time: A nine-year follow-up study . PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES, 60(2), 258-261. 10.1176/ps.2009.60.2.258

cited authors

  • Klap, R; Tang, L; Schell, T; Duan, N; Wells, K; Miranda, J; Sherbourne, C

authors

abstract

  • Objective: This study examined the long-term impact on stigma concerns of two quality improvement (QI) interventions for depression in primary care. Methods: Data were from a nine-year follow-up of 805 participants in Partners in Care, a group-level randomized trial comparing patients enrolled in interventions with enhanced resources for therapy (QI-therapy) (N=284) or medication management (QImeds) (N=267) with those in usual care (N=254). Participants were asked about stigma in regard to friends, health insurance, and employers. Results: Individuals in QI-therapy were significantly less likely than those in usual care and QI-meds to report concerns about friends learning about a history of depression (odds ratio [OR]=.66 and .65, respectively), and those in QI-meds were more likely than those in QI-therapy and usual care to have concerns about getting insurance (OR=1.42 and 1.68, respectively). Conclusions: Quality improvement programs for depression can raise or lower stigma concerns, depending on program design and resources for specific treatments.

publication date

  • January 1, 2009

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 258

end page

  • 261

volume

  • 60

issue

  • 2