Association of collaborative care intervention features with depression and metabolic outcomes in the INDEPENDENT study: A mixed methods study

Hassan, S and Liju, S and Johnson, L C M and Patel, S A and Emmert-Fees, KMF and Suvada, K and Tandon, N and Sridhar, G R and Aravind , S and Poongothai, S and Anjana, R M and Mohan, V and Chwastiak, L and Ali, M K (2024) Association of collaborative care intervention features with depression and metabolic outcomes in the INDEPENDENT study: A mixed methods study. Primary Care Diabetes, 18 (3). pp. 319-326.

[img]PDF
Restricted to MDRF users only. Others may ->

473Kb

Abstract

Aims: The INtegrating DEPrEssioN and Diabetes treatmENT (INDEPENDENT) trial tested a collaborative care model including electronic clinical decision support (CDS) for treating diabetes and depression in India. We aimed to assess which features of this clinically and cost-effective intervention were associated with improvements in diabetes and depression measures. Methods: Post-hoc analysis of the INDEPENDENT trial data (189 intervention participants) was conducted to determine each intervention feature's effect: 1. Collaborative case reviews between expert psychiatrists and the care team; 2. Patient care-coordinator contacts; and 3. Clinicians' CDS prompt modifications. Primary outcome was baseline-to-12-months improvements in diabetes control, blood pressure, cholesterol, and depression. Implementer interviews revealed barriers and facilitators of intervention success. Joint displays integrated mixed methods' results. Results: High baseline HbA1c≥ 74.9 mmol/mol (9%) was associated with 5.72 fewer care-coordinator contacts than those with better baseline HbA1c (76.8 mmol/mol, 9.18%, p < 0.001). Prompt modification proportions varied from 38.3% (diabetes) to 1.3% (LDL). Interviews found that providers' and participants' visit frequencies were preference dependent. Qualitative data elucidated patient-level factors that influenced number of clinical contacts and prompt modifications explaining their lack of association with clinical outcomes. Conclusion: Our mixed methods approach underlines the importance of the complementarity of different intervention features. Qualitative findings further illuminate reasons for variations in fidelity from the core model.

Item Type:Article
Official URL/DOI:https://www.primary-care-diabetes.com/article/S175...
Uncontrolled Keywords:Collaborative care; Depression; Diabetes; Integration; Intervention components; LMIC
Subjects:Diabetes Clinical Trials
Diabetes Epidemiology
Divisions:Department of Epidemiology
Department of Diabetology
Department of Clinical Trials
ID Code:1462
Deposited By:surendar radha
Deposited On:18 Sep 2024 12:52
Last Modified:18 Sep 2024 12:52

Repository Staff Only: item control page