Treating Depressed Older Adults in Primary Care: Narrowing the Gap between Efficacy and Effectiveness Article

Unützer, J, Katon, W, Sullivan, M et al. (1999). Treating Depressed Older Adults in Primary Care: Narrowing the Gap between Efficacy and Effectiveness . 77(2), 225-256. 10.1111/1468-0009.00132

cited authors

  • Unützer, J; Katon, W; Sullivan, M; Miranda, J

authors

abstract

  • There is a gap between the efficacy of treatments for late-life depression under research conditions and the effectiveness of treatments as they occur in the "real world" of primary care. Considerable evidence supports the efficacy of treatments for late-life depression, but many depressed older adults either are not recognized or do not receive effective treatment for depression in primary care. Older adults face a range of special treatment barriers: knowledge deficits; losses and social isolation; multiple medical problems; and lack of financial resources. More research is needed to understand these barriers and to study the effectiveness of multifaceted, population-based disease management interventions for late-life depression in primary care.

publication date

  • January 1, 1999

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 225

end page

  • 256

volume

  • 77

issue

  • 2