Abstract

Back to table of contents Previous article Next article ArticleFull AccessDepression Outcomes and Quality of Postdischarge Care of Elders Hospitalized for Major DepressionMi Jin Lee Ph.D.Enola Proctor Ph.D.Nancy Morrow-Howell Ph.D.Mi Jin Lee Ph.D.Search for more papers by this authorEnola Proctor Ph.D.Search for more papers by this authorNancy Morrow-Howell Ph.D.Search for more papers by this authorPublished Online:1 Oct 2006AboutSectionsPDF/EPUB ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack Citations ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InEmail Despite the high prevalence of depression among older adults ( 1 , 2 ), this population underutilizes community mental health services ( 3 , 4 ) and experiences disproportionate psychiatric hospitalization ( 5 , 6 ). Although inpatient treatment is quite effective in reducing the symptoms of depression ( 7 , 8 , 9 ), hospital stays have shortened, and a growing number of older patients are discharged from the hospital without having fully recovered from depression ( 9 , 10 ). After hospital discharge, many elders with depression have been shown to have medical, functional, and psychosocial needs in addition to their psychiatric needs ( 11 , 12 , 13 , 14 ). Whether meeting those needs is associated with depression outcomes has not yet been tested empirically. From a biopsychosocial perspective and taking into account established high rates of comorbidity ( 12 ), we posited that elders with depression have multiple domains of needs and that psychiatric care alone may not be sufficient to achieve and sustain positive outcomes. Rather, depression outcomes of older adults may depend on multiple domains of care, including psychiatric, medical, functional, and psychosocial care ( 11 , 14 , 15 ). Two studies provide support for the relationship between meeting service needs and outcomes, including symptomatology, quality- of-life outcomes, and mortality ( 16 , 17 ). Similar to Leff and colleagues' study ( 16 ), in this study, we judged quality of care by whether a patient received services that met needs for care, and we examined whether quality of care conceptualized and measured in this way would be associated with depression outcomes of older adults. We further explored the time frame in which the effects of quality of care on depression outcomes are manifested. We examined this relationship six weeks and six months after patients were discharged from the hospital for major depression. A six-week observation reflects the period when Medicare home health services are most likely to be provided, consistent with an emphasis on acute care and postacute care. A six-month observation period is congruent with empirical studies indicating that depressive symptoms of older patients six months after discharge are a strong predictor of long-term depression outcomes ( 18 , 19 ) and with published clinical guidelines ( 20 ). These guidelines for treating depression in later life state that four to five months of care should follow acute care to prevent recurrence of depression ( 20 ). The assessment of quality of care at these two time points permitted us to test effects of time on quality of care and depression outcomes. MethodsSampleOne hundred ninety-nine elders were enrolled in the study, and they were hospitalized for major depression on a 34-bed geropsychiatric unit of a large urban hospital and discharged home between March 1997 and May 2000. Only patients discharged to the community were considered in our study because home is the place where most patients go after discharge. Our study focus was the relationship between needs met through community-based services and depression outcomes after patients had been discharged from the hospital. A consecutive 568 admissions were screened for study eligibility. Inclusion criteria were that depression was the primary reason for hospitalization, patients met DSM-IV axis I depression criteria, and the destination after discharge was a community setting rather than a nursing home, hospital, or other institutional setting. The medical director of the geropsychiatric unit, a geropsychiatrist, reviewed each patient's diagnoses. After routine cognitive testing and observation of patients, nurses provided information about the cognitive status of patients who met the inclusion criteria. If a nurse reported that cognitive impairment prevented informed consent, we obtained assent from the patient and consent from a family member. We excluded two patients who could not provide reliable information because of cognitive impairment and not having a collateral source of information. Of 269 eligible patients hospitalized during the study period, 199 patients (74 percent) consented to participate. Gender, race, marital status, and age did not vary between study participants and those who refused. The human studies committee of the university approved data collection and protocol of the study, and all participants gave informed consent. At patients' discharge, research assistants abstracted medical records and baseline measures and interviewed the study participants. Service use was assessed from self-reports of depressed elders. Despite some inaccuracy, self-reports are efficient and are commonly used to measure service use ( 21 , 22 , 23 ). When study participants could not be interviewed because of cognitive impairment, we interviewed their family members (62 proxies at six weeks, or 31 percent; 22 proxies at six months, or 11 percent). Service use was assessed by research assistants through telephone interviews conducted six weeks after discharge, and 186 of 199 participants (response rate of 93 percent) were interviewed. The six-month service use and outcome assessment was conducted during in-home interviews, and interviews were attempted with all 199 participants except three who had died within six weeks of discharge. The response rate was 87 percent, and 174 persons were interviewed. Of 199 patients who were initially discharged to the community, only 148 were living in the community six months after discharge. Excluded from our analyses were 51 elders, including 20 who moved to nursing homes during the six months, 13 who died, and 18 lost to follow-up for other reasons, such as refusal to participate or our inability to locate them. Those included in the sample and those in the three excluded groups (those in nursing homes, deceased, or lost to follow-up) did not differ in terms of gender, age, race, living areas, or depressive symptoms at discharge. For instance, Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) ( 24 ) scores, which could range from 0 to 30, with higher scores indicating depressive symptoms, were not significantly different between those included in the sample (mean±SD=12.4±6.7) and the three excluded groups (in nursing homes, 13.4±8.0; deceased, 12.3±6.9; lost to follow-up, 12.1±8.2). MeasuresNeeds met for quality of care. Quality of postacute care was measured by assessing the extent to which service needs were met. Following a recommendation by Dickey and colleagues ( 25 ), we developed our criteria for assessing whether needs were met by using evidence- or consensus-based standards of care and disorder-specific treatments, which were assumed to yield the best clinical outcomes. As reported elsewhere ( 11 , 26 ), and consistent with a biopsychosocial perspective on mental disorder ( 27 ), we assessed service needs at discharge in four domains: psychiatric, medical, functional, and psychosocial. Specifically, using standardized instruments and review of medical records for services ordered at discharge, we identified 11 service needs: five potential service needs in the psychiatric domain (psychiatric care, electroconvulsive treatment, monitoring of psychotropic medication, psychotherapy, and supervision for cognitive impairment), two potential service needs in the medical domain (medical care and monitoring medication for chronic conditions), two potential service needs in the functional domain (human assistance for dependencies in activities of daily living and human assistance for dependencies in instrumental activities of daily living), and two potential service needs in the psychosocial domain (socialization services and casework or counseling for psychosocial situations).In the psychosocial domain, socialization services included visiting an adult day care center, senior center, or senior citizen club; participating in a telephone support program; or seeing a companion, friendly visitor, or hospice visitor. The following services were included in casework or counseling in the psychosocial domain: counseling about psychosocial problems with a psychiatrist or other professionals, such as another doctor, a mental health specialist, a cleric, or a medical social worker; attending an adult day care center, senior center, or day treatment program or partial hospice program for counseling; meals services; transportation services; family support groups; telephone services, although not for socialization; legal or financial services; caseworker services; or social services.Needs were coded as met in a given domain if a patient had at least one service encounter for each needed service type. For example, if the medical record reflected that a follow-up appointment with the admitting psychiatrist was arranged, and if the patient went home with a prescription for psychotropic medication, that patient was deemed to need two types of psychiatric service. The domain was coded as "needs met" if the patient received at least one service corresponding to each of the two types of psychiatric service—that is, at least one appointment with the psychiatrist and at least one contact with a professional in which medication compliance and side effects were assessed.We determined whether needs were met in each domain six weeks after discharge (six-week needs-met variables) and six months after discharge (six-month needs-met variables). For each patient, each of the four domains of service need was coded as needs met, needs unmet, or no need. Because every patient had psychiatric needs by virtue of study eligibility, the no-need category was not applicable for quality of psychiatric care. Each quality-of-care variable was dummy coded with a reference group of "needs met" for statistical analyses.Depression outcomes. Depression was measured by the GDS, developed to assess depressive symptoms specifically for older adults ( 24 ). Higher scores on the GDS (range 0-29) represent greater depressive symptoms, and the mean score at discharge and at six months was 12.6±6.6 and 12.0±7.2, respectively. Reliability ( α =.94) and validity of the GDS are well documented ( 24 ). Control variables. Variables that were empirically related to depression outcomes in the literature and that were significant in our bivariate analyses were used as control variables. We identified as control variables education, presence of psychotic features, the number of negative life events, and adequacy of care provided by family caregivers. Education was measured by a 5-point scale (from 1, eighth grade or less, to 5, undergraduate degree or higher); 87 patients (59 percent) attained an education level of at least graduation from high school. Forty-five patients (30 percent) exhibited psychotic features assessed by the geropsychiatrist's clinical judgment during the hospital stay. The number of negative life events during the six months after discharge from hospitalization was assessed through the Duke Life Events Scale ( 28 ) in the interviews at six months. We asked whether older adults experienced 14 events (for example, "Did you experience an illness or injury that required staying overnight or longer in the hospital?") and then counted the number of events that they perceived as negative (sample mean, .95±1.13, range 0-5). Adequacy of care provided by family caregivers was rated by the patient's social worker at discharge (from 1, poor care, to 5, excellent care; 3.69±1.18). Data analyses We ran bivariate analyses for depression outcomes with four domains of six-week and six-month needs-met variables after controlling for GDS scores at discharge. By controlling the baseline scores as a covariate, we avoided the statistical unreliability of change scores and made groups comparable from the same baseline score ( 29 ). To select control variables for multivariate analyses, we performed bivariate analyses. Because of nonsignificant results of the bivariate analyses, we eliminated age, gender, race, living areas, marital status, cognitive impairments, self-rated health, functional status, medical comorbidity, first episode of mood disorder, onset age of mood disorder, electroconvulsive treatment during hospitalization, suicide attempts during the month before hospitalization, income, private insurance coverage, and service use barriers. Only education, presence of psychotic features, the number of negative life events, and adequacy of care provided by family caregivers were associated with depression outcomes in bivariate analyses (p<.05), and they were included in the multivariate model. The significance level was set at p<.05 in multivariate models. Because depression outcome variables were measured continuously, we ran bivariate and multiple ordinary least-squares regression models. Data on depression ratings were missing for 33 patients (22 percent) at discharge and for seven patients (5 percent) at the six-month follow-up. Data for some control variables also were missing. For missing data, we used the multiple random imputation method to generate five independent data sets without missing data ( 30 ). This method assumes that missing data occur randomly. Each missing value is filled in with a set of plausible values that are created with information from other values of a variable and some associated variables (such as physical health and depression outcome), which usually do not have missing data ( 30 ). After generating the five imputed data sets, we performed identical analyses on each data set and combined or "rolled up" the results to yield less biased parameter estimates in the overall regression model. This method is superior to other kinds of imputation methods, such as mean substitution, hot decking, regression imputation, and single imputation, in terms of producing more accurate estimates ( 30 ). ResultsThe sample of 148 older patients in this study consisted of 108 women (73 percent) and 124 whites (84 percent) and 24 blacks (16 percent); 118 elders lived in urban areas (80 percent). Average age was 75.7±7.0 years (range of 60-95 years), and 87 patients (59 percent) were not married. One hundred twenty-one (82 percent) had private insurance coverage in addition to Medicare; ten (7 percent) had Medicaid coverage. Seventy-three patients (49 percent) had annual incomes of less than $15,000. Fifty-four (36 percent) received electroconvulsive therapy during hospitalization. The mean hospital stay was 18.4±12.6 days. Eleven (7 percent) had attempted suicide during the month before hospitalization. As reported elsewhere ( 11 ), all elders in the sample were assessed to have psychiatric service needs, 140 (95 percent) had medical service needs, 108 (73 percent) needed functional assistance with activities of daily living or instrumental activities of daily living, and 102 (69 percent) had psychosocial service needs at discharge. Congruent with our previous findings on needs met at six weeks ( 26 ), the proportion of needs met at six months after discharge was quite high for psychiatric (106 patients, or 72 percent) and medical needs (127 patients, or 86 percent) and low for functional (22 patients, or 15 percent) and psychosocial needs (57 patients, or 39 percent). In bivariate analyses, no six-week needs-met variables were associated with better depression outcomes ( Table 1 ). However, patients with no need for medical care exhibited significantly better depression outcomes than patients whose medical needs were met at six weeks. At six months, having functional and psychosocial needs met was associated with better depression outcomes. Those whose functional needs were unmet at six months showed poorer depression outcomes than those whose functional needs were met. Also, those whose psychosocial needs were unmet at six months showed poorer depression outcomes than those whose psychosocial needs were met. Congruent with the six-week findings, patients with no need for medical care exhibited better depression outcomes than those whose medical needs were met at six months. Table 1 Bivariate regression of Geriatric Depression Scale ratings and quality of care in four domains six weeks and six months after discharge from hospitalization for depression (N=148)Table 1 Bivariate regression of Geriatric Depression Scale ratings and quality of care in four domains six weeks and six months after discharge from hospitalization for depression (N=148)Enlarge table Only significant (p<.05) variables in the bivariate analyses were retained in the multivariate model. A multiple regression model for depression outcomes ( Table 2 ) indicated that only the six-month psychosocial needs-met variable was significantly associated with depression outcomes. Those whose psychosocial needs were unmet at six months showed significantly poorer depression outcome than those whose psychosocial needs were met. Needs met in the functional domain was not a significant variable in the multivariate model. Table 2 Multiple regression of Geriatric Depression Scale ratings and quality of care in three domains among 148 patients six months after discharge from hospitalization for depressionTable 2 Multiple regression of Geriatric Depression Scale ratings and quality of care in three domains among 148 patients six months after discharge from hospitalization for depressionEnlarge tableDiscussion and conclusions Our findings illuminate the significant role of psychosocial care for reducing depressive symptoms of older adults. Also, the findings suggest that the six-month postdischarge period of psychosocial care (such as provision of meal and transportation services) may be critical for gaining better depression outcomes than those obtained in the six-week postdischarge period. Although psychosocial care provided in the first six weeks was not associated with depression outcomes, the relationship between six-month psychosocial care and depression outcomes was statistically significant. These findings suggest that postacute care should be provided during an extended period after hospital discharge to improve depression outcomes. Six weeks of care after discharge from acute care may not be sufficient to attain better depression outcomes. Such a finding is congruent with guidelines for depression treatment in later life, which states that four to five months of care should follow acute care to prevent recurrence of depression ( 20 ). We did not demonstrate a significant relationship between quality of psychiatric care and depression outcomes. Perhaps this was because our sample experienced less variability in postacute psychiatric needs and services than it did in co-occurring needs and their corresponding services. More than 90 percent of this sample visited a psychiatrist or other physicians at least once for mental health problems during the six months after discharge ( 31 ). This homogeneity of our sample presumably may have lowered the impact of postacute psychiatric care on depression outcomes. We expected that quality of medical and functional care may lead to better depression outcomes. In bivariate analyses, patients with no need for medical care exhibited better depression outcomes than patients whose medical needs were met at six months. However, those findings were not significant when control variables were included. As for functional needs met, worse depression outcomes were shown in bivariate analyses for those whose functional needs were unmet at six months than for those whose functional needs were met. The relationship between needs met in the functional domain and depression outcomes was not significant in multivariate analyses, perhaps because of low statistical power. Several limitations of the study merit comment. In some respects, our measure of needs met was stringent in that all needed services must have been received to be coded as "needs met" in each domain. Yet, because the needs-met variable was assessed through service receipt, our measure did not capture some information about the quality of services. Nevertheless, our conceptualization of quality of care is commonly used in the quality-of-care literature, and it is a fundamental indicator for assessing one aspect of quality of care ( 16 , 21 , 22 , 32 , 33 ). Moreover, this conceptualization is consistent with emphasis on individual needs in evaluating quality of care ( 34 ). It is in line with classic definitions of quality of care, such as the degree to which care satisfies established norms of care in Donabedian's framework ( 35 ). Our work advances efforts to empirically test the relationship between quality of postacute care in multiple domains and depression outcomes. Findings suggested that quality of care for psychosocial needs should be addressed to gain better depression outcomes. Future research needs to further examine the relationship between quality of postacute care for comorbid conditions and psychiatric outcomes for depressed elders. Also, future work should continue to refine measurement of quality of care in multiple domains of needs.AcknowledgmentThe preparation of this article was supported by the Center for Mental Health Services Research, George Warren Brown School of Social Work, Washington University in St. Louis, through grant 1RO1-MH-56208 from the National Institute of Mental Health.The authors are affiliated with the George Warren Brown School of Social Work, Washington University, Campus Box 1196, 1 Brookings Drive, St. Louis, MO 63130 (e-mail: [email protected]).

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