北卡罗来纳州医疗保险青年抑郁症患者的治疗和结果

Naomi O. Davis PhD , Kelley A. Jones PhD , Alexis French PhD , Melissa A. Greiner MS , Chris Ricard Lea MD , Courtney L. McMickens MD, MPH, MHS , Nicole Heilbron PhD , Gary R. Maslow MD, MPH
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:青少年抑郁症呈上升趋势,并伴有不良的并发和长期预后。了解抑郁症治疗的接受情况和结果对解决青少年抑郁症的全民努力至关重要。本研究旨在了解治疗模式及其与抑郁症相关结果的关系。方法采用北卡罗莱纳州医疗补助申请对儿童医疗补助受益人的治疗和抑郁相关结果进行回顾性队列研究。样本包括34,623名年龄在5至21岁之间的青少年,他们被诊断为偶发性抑郁症。诊断后6个月评估心理治疗和抗抑郁药物。使用Cox比例风险模型计算风险比,分析抑郁相关结果,包括自杀或自残行为、急诊科使用情况和精神科住院情况。结果86%的青少年抑郁症患者接受了治疗(心理治疗39%,药物治疗16%,综合治疗31%),但很少有青少年接受了指南推荐的治疗时间。在6个月和18个月时,与其他组相比,接受联合治疗的青少年出现不良后果的风险更高。与全因急诊就诊相比,未治疗组的预后风险较低。单次心理治疗和不一致的药物填充也与不良结果有关;然而,更多的心理治疗与较低的全因急诊就诊风险相关。结论:这些数据表明,大多数接受抑郁症治疗的青少年对推荐指南的依从性不佳。接受联合治疗(药物和治疗)的青少年有更多的不良抑郁结果。由于索赔记录不包括临床数据,治疗类型、剂量、抑郁严重程度或这些因素的组合的影响不能轻易解开;因此,这些发现并不支持联合治疗导致不良结果的结论。更确切地说,有更严重的临床表现的年轻人更有可能被处方联合治疗,或者依从性差,从而导致更差的结果。了解如何在现实环境中提高依从性是必要的。结果表明,尽管接受了精神卫生保健,许多年轻人仍然在挣扎,这表明需要加强现有的治疗策略。研究应旨在更好地了解人群水平的抑郁症护理,并促进接受和坚持推荐的治疗时间。多样性,包含声明本文的一位或多位作者自认为是科学中一个或多个历史上未被充分代表的种族和/或族裔群体的成员。本文的一位或多位作者自认为是科学界一个或多个历史上未被充分代表的性和/或性别群体的成员。
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Treatment and Outcomes Among North Carolina Medicaid-Insured Youth With Depression

Objective

Youth depression is increasing and is associated with adverse concurrent and long-term outcomes. Understanding receipt of depression treatment and outcomes is critical for population-level efforts to address youth depression. This study aimed to understand treatment patterns and their association with depression-related outcomes.

Method

North Carolina Medicaid claims were used to conduct a retrospective cohort study of treatment and depression-related outcomes in pediatric Medicaid beneficiaries. The sample included 34,623 youth ages 5 to 21 years with an incident depression diagnosis. Psychotherapy and antidepressant medication were assessed for 6 months following diagnosis. Depression-related outcomes including suicidal or self-harming behaviors, emergency department use, and psychiatric hospitalization were analyzed using Cox proportional hazards models to calculate hazard ratios.

Results

Among youth with depression, 86% received treatment (39% psychotherapy, 16% medication, 31% combined), but few youth received guideline-recommended treatment duration. At 6 and 18 months, youth who received combined treatment had higher risk of adverse outcomes compared with the other groups. The untreated group had lower risk of outcomes other than all-cause emergency department visits. Single-session psychotherapy and inconsistent medication fills were also associated with poor outcomes; however, more psychotherapy sessions were associated with lower risk of all-cause emergency department visits.

Conclusion

These data show that the majority of youth who received depression treatment had suboptimal adherence to recommended guidelines. Youth who received combined treatment (both medication and therapy) had more adverse depression outcomes. As claims records do not include clinical data, the effect of treatment type, dose, depression severity, or a combination of these factors cannot be readily disentangled; therefore, these findings do not support a conclusion that combined treatment leads to poor outcomes. Rather, it is possible that youth with a more severe clinical profile are more likely to be prescribed combined treatment or to have poor adherence and thus worse outcomes. Understanding how to improve adherence in real-world settings is needed. Results suggest that many youth continue to struggle despite receipt of mental health care, indicating a call for enhancing existing treatment strategies. Research should aim to better understand population-level care for depression and to promote receipt of and adherence to recommended treatment duration across modalities.

Diversity & Inclusion Statement

One or more of the authors of this paper self-identifies as a member of one or more historically underrepresented racial and/or ethnic groups in science. One or more of the authors of this paper self-identifies as a member of one or more historically underrepresented sexual and/or gender groups in science.

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JAACAP open
JAACAP open Psychiatry and Mental Health
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