Ell, K., Xie, B., Kapetanovic, S., Quinn, D.I., Lee, P.J., Wells, A., & Chou, C.P. (2011). One-year follow-up of collaborative depression care for low-income, predominantly Hispanic patients with cancer. Psychiatric Services (Washington, D.C.), 62(2), 162–170.
To examine 18- and 24-month outcomes for patients who participated in the Alleviating Depression Among Patients with Cancer (ADAPt-C) clinical trial, whose aim was to improve access to culturally adapted depression care among low-income, predominantly Hispanic women with cancer
The usual-care group received standard oncology care for patients with depression. Oncologists were free to prescribe antidepressants or mental health care to both groups, and patients were free to use community mental health services. The intervention is adapted from the Improving Mood-Promoting Access to Collaborative Treatment (IMPACT) intervention, which provided collaborative intervention focused on problem solving, health navigation, personalized treatment and monitoring, assessment, and follow-up and education by a specialist. Follow-up occurred by telephone monthly.
Randomized control trial, longitudinal
The effectiveness of the psychoeducational components of the intervention is unclear because patients in the experimental group also used antidepressants to a greater degree and received more counseling than did patients in the other group. Evidence does support the conclusion that, in the intervention group, management of depression improved.
Collaborative supportive care with symptom monitoring, support, and follow-up can help patients with depression improve their outcomes. Ongoing monitoring and involvement to address depression in patients appears to result in more treatment of depression. Future work is needed to understand which component of this intervention is most effective.