wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/83ff2b48506ae8e2d8b81e3b7fec4859-dwight-johnson-mega/info.yaml

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abstract: 'Objective: This study assessed treatment preferences among low-income
Latino patients in public-sector primary care clinics and examined
whether a collaborative care intervention that included patient
education and allowed patients to choose between medication, therapy, or
both would increase the likelihood that patients received preferred
treatment. Methods: A total of 339 Latino patients with probable
depressive disorders were recruited; participants completed a baseline
conjoint analysis preference survey and were randomly assigned to
receive the intervention or enhanced usual care. At 16 weeks, a patient
survey assessed depression treatment received during the study period.
Logistic regression models were constructed to estimate treatment
preferences, examine patient characteristics associated with treatment
preferences, and examine patient characteristics associated with a match
between stated preference and actual treatment received. Results: The
conjoint analysis preference survey showed that patients preferred
counseling or counseling plus medication over antidepressant medication
alone and that they preferred treatment in primary care over specialty
mental health care, but they showed no significant preference for
individual versus group treatment. Patients also indicated that
individual education sessions, telephone sessions, transportation
assistance, and family involvement were barrier reduction strategies
that would enhance their likelihood of accepting treatment. Compared
with patients assigned to usual care, those in the intervention group
were 21 times as likely to receive preferred treatment. Among all
participants, women, unemployed persons, those who spoke English, and
those referred by providers were more likely to receive preferred
treatment. Conclusions: Collaborative care interventions that include
psychotherapy can increase the likelihood that Latino patients receive
preferred care; however, special efforts may be needed to address
preferences of working persons, men, and Spanish-speaking patients.
(Psychiatric Services 61: 1112-1118, 2010)'
affiliation: 'Dwight-Johnson, M (Corresponding Author), RAND Corp, 1776 Main St, Santa
Monica, CA 90401 USA.
Dwight-Johnson, Megan, RAND Corp, Santa Monica, CA 90401 USA.
Lagomasino, Isabel T.; Green, Jennifer M., Univ So Calif, Dept Psychiat, Los Angeles,
CA USA.
Hay, Joel, Univ So Calif, Sch Pharm, Los Angeles, CA USA.
Zhang, Lily; Tang, Lingqi, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Inst Neuropsychiat, Hlth Serv
Res Ctr, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
Duan, Naihua, Columbia Univ, Dept Biostat, New York, NY USA.'
author: Dwight-Johnson, Megan and Lagomasino, Isabel T. and Hay, Joel and Zhang, Lily
and Tang, Lingqi and Green, Jennifer M. and Duan, Naihua
author-email: meganj@rand.org
author_list:
- family: Dwight-Johnson
given: Megan
- family: Lagomasino
given: Isabel T.
- family: Hay
given: Joel
- family: Zhang
given: Lily
- family: Tang
given: Lingqi
- family: Green
given: Jennifer M.
- family: Duan
given: Naihua
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.61.11.1112
eissn: 1557-9700
files: []
issn: 1075-2730
journal: PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES
keywords-plus: 'QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS; CONJOINT-ANALYSIS; PRIME-MD; PATIENT
PREFERENCES; MEXICAN-AMERICANS; HEALTH; ACCEPTABILITY; INTERVENTIONS;
VALIDATION; DISORDERS'
language: English
month: NOV
number: '11'
number-of-cited-references: '39'
orcid-numbers: Duan, Naihua/0000-0001-9411-2924
pages: 1112-1118
papis_id: 0bb950916fbc43c5999fddda7925e05c
ref: Dwightjohnson2010effectivenesscollabo
times-cited: '52'
title: Effectiveness of Collaborative Care in Addressing Depression Treatment Preferences
Among Low-Income Latinos
type: Article
unique-id: WOS:000283651500012
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '12'
volume: '61'
web-of-science-categories: 'Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational
Health;
Psychiatry'
year: '2010'