Effect of improved primary care access on quality of depression care

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Abstract

PURPOSE: We wanted to determine whether a major improvement in access to primary care during 2000 was associated with changes in the quality of care for patients with depression. METHODS: Health plan administrative data were analyzed by multilevel regression to compare the quality of care received by patients with depression between 1999 and 2001, a time without major changes in depression care guidelines. Approximately 6,000 patients with depression who received all care in a large multispecialty medical group during any single year were subjects for this study. Thirteen different quality measures assessed process quality under the dimensions of effectiveness, timeliness, safety, and patient-centeredness. RESULTS: The largest change was a reduction in the proportion of depressed patients with no follow-up visit in primary care after starting a new antidepressant medication: from 33.0% before a change in access to care to 15.4% afterward, P =.001. During the same period, continuity of care in primary care improved (>50% of primary care visits to 1 doctor increased from 67.3% to 74.0%, P =

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Solberg, L. I., Crain, A. L., Sperl-Hillen, J. A. M., Hroscikoski, M. C., Engebretson, K. I., & O’Connor, P. J. (2006). Effect of improved primary care access on quality of depression care. Annals of Family Medicine, 4(1), 69–74. https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.426

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