Team-based approach to care shows
success in fight against depression with diabetes, heart disease
Many people have multiple common chronic diseases such
as diabetes and heart disease, which complicates health care needs. When depression
coexists with diabetes, heart disease, or both, health outcomes are often less
favorable.
In a randomized controlled trial, testing a primary care
intervention called TEAMcare, nurses worked with patients and health teams to
manage care for depression and physical disease together, using evidence-based
guidelines. The result for patients: less depression, and better control of blood
sugar, blood pressure and cholesterol and improved quality of life.
Researchers at the University of Washington (UW) and
Group Health Research Institute published their findings in the December 30, 2010
New England Journal of Medicine.
"Depressed patients with multiple uncontrolled chronic
diseases are at high risk of heart attack, stroke and other complications,"
said Dr. Wayne J. Katon, a UW professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences
and an affiliate investigator at Group Health Research Institute. "We are
excited about finding a new way to help patients control these chronic diseases,
including depression. Then they can get back to enjoying what makes their lives
worth living," he said.
Depression is common in patients with diabetes and heart
disease, and it has been linked to worse self-management and more complications
and deaths. Depression can make people feel helpless and hopeless about managing
other chronic diseases. In turn, coping with chronic disease can worsen depression.
This tangle of health problems can feel overwhelming-for patients, their families
and their health care providers.
To explore possible solutions, the trial focused on 214
Group Health Cooperative patients who were randomly assigned to either standard
care or the TEAMcare intervention. In the TEAMcare intervention, a nurse care
manager coached each patient, monitored disease control and depression, and worked
with the patient's primary care doctors to make changes in medications and lifestyle
when treatment goals were not reached. Working together, the nurse and patient
set realistic step-by-step goals: reductions in depression and blood sugar, pressure
and cholesterol levels. Patients assigned to the standard care arm of the study
did not receive the nurses' coaching and monitoring services.
To reach these goals, the nurse regularly monitored the
patient's mental and physical health. Based on guidelines that promoted incremental
improvements, the care team offered recommendations to the patient's primary care
doctor to consider changes to the dose or type of medication used for managing
blood pressure, blood sugar, lipids or depression. This process is called "treating
to target."
Katon said that the "treating to target" approach
helped boost patients' confidence as goals were accomplished. "It reverses
what happens when they set overly ambitious goals they don't reach, which discourages
them, their families, and health care providers."
At one year-compared with the standard care control group-patients
with the TEAMcare intervention were significantly less depressed and also had
improved levels of blood glucose, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and
systolic blood pressure. These differences are clinically significant, particularly
if achieved in large numbers of patients, Katon said.
"Each of these four disease control measures has
been linked to higher risks of complications and deaths from diabetes and heart
disease," he added.
The researchers have not yet completed their analysis
of possible cost savings from the intervention, but they estimated that the two-year
TEAMcare intervention cost $1,224 per patient, on average. This is for patients
whose medical care costs health care systems approximately $10,000 per year, said
Katon.
TEAMcare intervention patients reported enhanced quality
of life and satisfaction with care for depression and either diabetes, heart disease
or both. Patients were more likely to have timely adjustment of glucose levels,
high blood pressure, cholesterol and antidepressant medications.
"TEAMcare is a truly patient-centered approach that
enhances a primary care team to deliver optimal care for both physical and mental
health in a seamless manner," said co-author Elizabeth H.B. Lin, M.D., MPH,
Group Health family physician and an affiliate investigator at Group Health Research
Institute. "It recognizes there can be no health without mental health."
Other co-authors were: Paul Ciechanowski, MDCM, MPH,
of the UW School of Medicine's Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
and an affiliate investigator at Group Health Research Institute; Bessie Young,
M.D., MPH, of the UW School of Medicine's Department of Medicine and Veterans
Affairs Puget Sound Health Care; Michael Von Korff, Sc.D., Evette J. Ludman, Ph.D.,
Do Peterson, MS, and Mary McGregor, MSN, of Group Health Research Institute; Carolyn
M. Rutter, Ph.D., of Group Health Research Institute and the Department of Biostatistics
of the UW School of Public Health; and David McCulloch, M.D., of Group Health.
The National Institute of Mental Health funded the TEAMcare
trial, with institutional support from Group Health Cooperative.
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