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Feasibility of Depression Care Management by E-mail

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Depression
Interventions
Other: Depression care management by secure messaging
Registration Number
NCT00755235
Lead Sponsor
Kaiser Permanente
Brief Summary

This study will test whether an electronic system that monitors and sends messages to help people with depression could be feasible, acceptable, and potentially effective as a treatment.

Detailed Description

Symptoms of depression, such as persistent sadness, problems sleeping, and inability to feel pleasure, interfere with the daily lives of more than 20 million Americans. Previous research indicates that telephone care management systems improve the quality and outcomes of depression care, but are too expensive to be used widely. Using secure messaging over e-mail would be more cost effective than telephone care. This study will examine whether a secure messaging care management program would be feasible, based on whether participants are willing to sign up for and continue with the program, and whether the program has a positive effect on those participants enrolled in the program.

Potential participants for this study will be contacted via e-mail, with a follow-up telephone call if they do not respond to the e-mail message. Only people who have used e-mails in the past year and who are starting antidepressant treatment will be contacted. The percentage of people contacted who enroll will be recorded.

Participation in this study will last 6 months. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either a secure messaging care management program, based on effective telephone management programs, or their usual care with no intervention. Those receiving the secure messaging program will receive an initial welcome message and monitoring messages approximately 2, 6, and 10 weeks after treatment has begun. The monitoring messages will include structured assessments of depression severity, medication adherence, medication side effects, and barriers to continuing treatment. Participants who do not respond to monitoring messages will receive up to two e-mailed reminders. Care managers will analyze the results of monitoring messages, provide feedback and recommendations to physicians, coordinate physician follow-ups, and facilitate emergency care or specialty referrals. Care managers will also provide patients with motivation, based on semi-scripted protocols, and education concerning their disorder and treatment. Measures of the success of the study will be taken at enrollment and after 6 months of participation. Specific measurements will include the response rate of recruitment e-mails, response rate for follow-up data collection, proportion of those in the secure messaging program who complete the monitoring assessments, effects of the program on antidepressant treatment, and effects of the program on patient satisfaction.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
208
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patient at Capitol Hill or Rainier clinics of Group Health Cooperative in Seattle
  • New prescription of an antidepressant, defined by an interval of at least 180 days since a previous antidepressant prescription
  • Indication of depression, defined by a visit diagnosis of major depressive disorder (Internal Classification of Diseases 9th Revision [ICD9] codes 296.2x or 296.3x) within 30 days of the first prescription
  • Has used secure messaging, or e-mailing, at least twice in the last 12 months
Exclusion Criteria
  • Any diagnosis of psychotic disorder or bipolar disorder in the prior 2 years
  • Any prescription for mood stabilizer or antipsychotic medication in the prior 2 years

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
1Depression care management by secure messagingParticipants will receive depression care management by secure messaging.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
20-Item Symptom Checklist Depression ScaleMeasured at baseline and after 6 months of treatment

20-item depression severity scalse adapted from longer SCL-90. Mean score ranges from 0 to 4 with scores above 1.5 indicating moderate depression.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Treatment SatisfactionMeasured after 6 months of treatment

Single item seven point scale ranging from "very satisfied" to "very dissatisfied"

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Group Health Cooperative Center for Health Studies

🇺🇸

Seattle, Washington, United States

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