Comparing In-Person, Telephonic, and Video-Based Treatment of Depression in Adult Primary Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Publication date: Dec 05, 2024

The COVID-19 pandemic forced a rapid shift toward virtual modalities for the treatment of depression in primary care. Participants were adults 18 years and older with a new episode of depression diagnosed in primary care between March 1, 2020, and May 21, 2021, and moderate-to-severe symptoms of depression at the time of diagnosis (N = 9619). Outcomes were 1) antidepressant medications prescribed and dispensed (referred to as received), as well as adherence to those medications; 2) referrals made to depression-related services and the receipt of those services; and 3) a follow-up visit completed with the diagnosing practitioner regardless of treatment actions. Patients were 42. 4 +/- 17. 8 years old, and 77. 6% had moderate-to-severe symptoms at diagnosis. Most patients were women (70. 4%), 48. 2% were Hispanic, and 8. 4% were Black. Telephone visits were associated with 64% increased odds of having an antidepressant prescribed when compared to in-person visits. However, patients prescribed an antidepressant during a telephone visit were 52% less likely to receive this prescription when compared to patients who were prescribed an antidepressant during an in-person visit. Telephone and video visits were associated with 48% and 37% decreased odds, respectively, of having a follow-up visit with the prescribing practitioner when compared to an in-person visit. Telemedicine for depression in adult primary care may result in greater antidepressant prescribing than in-person care, but these medications are less likely to be received. This study’s findings suggest that health systems should adjust electronic decision support tools (such as mail-order pharmacies) to ensure virtual care decisions are implemented.

Concepts Keywords
Antidepressant antidepressant
Covid COVID 19
Hispanic depression
Pharmacies primary care
virtual care

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Depression
disease MESH COVID-19 Pandemic

Original Article

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