Conference Coverage

Case shows power of collaborative care for depression

Remission rate for Boeing employees climbed from 10% to 35%


 

REPORTING FROM APA 2019

– Under an accountable care contract with airplane maker Boeing, the University of Washington, Seattle, increased the rate of depression remission from about 10% to 35%, and the number of people in remission improved, based on Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) scores, from 20% to 70% – both in less than a year.

Dr. Jürgen Unützer, chair of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, University of Washington, Seattle M. Alexander Otto/MDedge News

Dr. Jürgen Unützer

Boeing was particularly concerned about depression among its roughly 27,000 Puget Sound–area employees when it entered a contract with the University of Washington (UW) a few years ago for health services. Workers with depression are less likely to show up to work, and when they do, they are more likely to make mistakes and cause safety problems. To ensure that the university addressed the problem, Boeing tied payments to improved depression scores.

It didn’t take UW long to meet the PHQ-9 targets for improvement and remission, meaning a score below 5 points. Boeing also wanted its employees to be screened annually for depression and repeated testing of patients with depression to track how well they were doing. The university increased the number of patients rescreened within 8 weeks of their first PHQ-9 from about 45% to 75% – also in less than a year.

UW was able to come up to speed quickly because it had been developing a collaborative care model for depression management in primary care for years. It simply scaled up the approach to meet Boeing’s targets.

“This has been an interesting journey,” said Jürgen Unützer, MD, MPH, who has been key to the efforts. “It’s required quite a bit of work, but it can be done. We’ve made a lot of progress,” he said at the American Psychiatric Association annual meeting.

Key components, besides the primary care provider, include evidence-based treatment, a mental health case manager, a system to track outcomes, and a psychiatrist to consult when patients do not improve. It’s a team approach.

Dr. Unützer and his colleagues have proved that it can work among older adults with depression and, in the end, save money (Am J Manag Care. 2008 Feb;14[2]:95-100). They’ve even published a how-to book, “Integrated Care: Creating Effective Mental and Primary Health Care Teams” (John Wiley & Sons, 2016).

A key challenge with Boeing was making sure that depressed patients returned for follow-up care and repeat PHQ-9s, and that they did not languish on ineffective treatments.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Increasingly violent storms may strain mental health
MDedge Internal Medicine
Gun ownership practices linked to soldier suicide risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
Medical community confronts physician depression, suicide
MDedge Internal Medicine
Intranasal esketamine plus antidepressant deflects relapse
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA overlooked red flags in esketamine testing
MDedge Internal Medicine
LTC-associated suicide among older adults more common than previously thought
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ask patients about worst example of suicidal ideation
MDedge Internal Medicine
Patients with mood disorders may have altered microbiome
MDedge Internal Medicine
Consider iatrogenesis in patients with new psychiatric symptoms
MDedge Internal Medicine
Increased awareness needed of bipolar disorder in primary care
MDedge Internal Medicine