Mental disorders can be very. A Meta-Analysis of Labor Supply Effects of Interventions for Major Depressive Disorder

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Mental disorders can be very. A Meta-Analysis of Labor Supply Effects of Interventions for Major Depressive Disorder"

Transcription

1 A Meta-Analysis of Labor Supply Effects of Interventions for Major Depressive Disorder Justin W. Timbie, B.A. Marcela Horvitz-Lennon, M.D., M.P.H. Richard G. Frank, Ph.D. Sharon-Lise T. Normand, Ph.D. Objective: The aims of this study were to examine labor supply effects of interventions for major depressive disorder and to compare these effects with a summary measure of clinical effectiveness. Methods: Research articles published in English-language journals from 1980 through May 2004 were searched by using five research databases. Only randomized trials that included a placebo group or a usual care group were eligible for the study, regardless of the specific type of intervention. Valid trials were those that enrolled adult patients with major depressive disorder and assessed changes in labor output by using a measure of time worked or labor market participation. From a total of 706 trials uncovered from the database searches, only four met all inclusion criteria. Trial outcomes were transformed into standardized effect sizes on the basis of Cohen s d. Hierarchical linear models were used to separately pool work outcomes and clinical outcomes. Results: An improvement of.34 standard deviation was found in the size of the clinical effect of interventions compared with placebo or usual care among 1,261 unique patients with depression. An improvement of.12 standard deviation was found in the size of the effect on labor supply among 1,848 unique patients. Conclusions: Although the interventions studied were associated with reduced symptoms of depression and increased labor output, the labor benefits were small according to standard benchmarks used in interpreting the substantive significance of values of Cohen s d. The difference in effects may have been due to different underlying efficacies, brief durations of follow-up, or extrinsic factors that affect labor supply. (Psychiatric Services 57: , 2006) Mental disorders can be very disruptive to labor market activities. They reduce the likelihood that affected individuals will be able to participate in the labor market, increase the time absent from work, and lower workplace performance, all of which may result in reduced earnings (1 3). Realizing the potential productivity gains from expanding access to appropriate mental health care has long been a goal of policy makers and of advocates for people with mental disorders (4). President Kennedy, in his message on mental illness in 1963, emphasized the labor market benefits from effectively treating and preventing mental disorders (5). The authors are affiliated with the department of health care policy of Harvard Medical School, 180 Longwood Avenue, Suite 301, Boston, Massachusetts ( , timbie@hcp.med.harvard.edu). The lost productivity resulting from mental illness in the United States was estimated at more than $200 billion in 1994 (6). At the same time, advances in the clinical sciences have provided clinicians with effective treatments for nearly every major mental illness (7). However, only a small fraction of people with a mental disorder receives appropriate levels of treatment for their condition (8). Together, these observations suggest that by expanding access to evidence-based treatments, the American economy might realize substantial gains in productivity. But for this supposition to be true, the following complex sequence of conditions must be satisfied: individuals experiencing diminished productivity due to a mental illness must obtain treatment, available treatments must not only reduce symptoms but also improve work-related outcomes, and treatment delivered in community-based settings must be effective and patients must respond. In this article we focus on the second assumption that available treatments reduce symptoms of depression and improve work-related outcomes. Researchers have investigated the impact of interventions for depression on labor supply in several ways: in observational studies (9 11), in randomized trials (12 15), and by using quasiexperimental designs (16). Conclusions arising from observational studies, although applicable to broad populations, are vulnerable to confounding and selection biases. Randomized studies minimize these threats to in- 212

2 ternal validity but are restricted to selected and possibly unrepresentative populations. In addition, such studies might not reflect the level of care received in community settings. To our knowledge, no meta-analyses have assessed the labor supply effects of interventions for depression by using studies with experimental designs. A review by Mintz and colleagues (17) that examined mostly randomized trials compared changes in work impairment across a variety of treatments, including tricyclic antidepressants, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, and. Although the authors found medium to large effects on work functioning, their results were not pooled. In addition, although work functioning scales are used frequently in psychiatric clinical trials, they do not provide a measure of the economic value of work effort that is most useful to policy makers (18). Measuring the economic impact of depression interventions in terms of labor output, such as hours worked, days worked, and changes in employment rates, is a more objective alternative. In this article we examine two specific questions about the short-term response of labor supply to interventions for major depression. First, on the basis of evidence from randomized controlled trials, do indicators of labor market activity respond to interventions for depression? Second, how does the size of the effect on labor supply compare with the magnitude of the change in symptom severity? The answers to these questions offer an important empirical link in the causal chain relating the social costs of illness to the gains from treatment. Methods Search strategy We searched the medical literature for studies published between January 1980 and May 2004 to identify all randomized controlled trials published in English-language journals that measured the effectiveness of interventions for major depressive disorder in terms of labor supply. Search terms included depression or depressive disorder, employment, work productivity, work functioning, and quality of life. MEDLINE, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, PsycINFO, the Science Citation Index, and the Social Science Citation Index were used. We included studies that enrolled patients with major depressive disorder, were randomized controlled trials, and reported economic outcomes on the basis of time missed from work or employment status. We excluded studies that restricted enrollment to depressed elderly or pediatric populations, that assessed depression among patients with a significant comorbid medical condition (for example, AIDS or cancer), and that focused primarily on patients with a diagnosis of a severe mental illness, such as bipolar disorder, psychoses, or schizophrenia. Data abstraction Data were abstracted by using a standardized protocol and were entered electronically into an Excel database. Relevant data elements were abstracted by one reviewer (the first author), and validated by another (the second author). Discrepancies were reconciled through discussion and review of the original article. Study characteristics collected included author, publication year, type of intervention, type of labor output and depression outcome measured, duration of follow-up, percentage of study participants with major depression, mean age, race, gender, and educational attainment. We selected any intervention that involved pharmacotherapy,, enhanced access to specialty care, or any combination of these. Control groups consisted of either usual care or no care for example, placebo. We abstracted results for two types of outcomes: labor output and clinical response to treatment. Labor outputs were restricted to those measuring time missed from work or participation in the labor market. Data on changes in symptoms of depression were sought for all trials that reported valid measures of labor supply, which often required retrieval of a companion article. Acceptable outcomes were either measures of change in depression status or the percentage of patients responding to the intervention. Response was defined as an improvement of at least 50 percent from baseline values on any of the following symptom scales: the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), the Clinical Global Impression of Severity of Illness (CGI-S), the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM- D), the Inventory of Depressive Symptomology (IDS), the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), or the 20-item Symptom Checklist (SCL-20). For studies that reported both crude estimates of intervention effects and those adjusted for potential confounders, we selected the adjusted results. Statistical analysis Because there was no single measure of treatment effect that was common to all studies, we transformed all outcomes to a common scale, Cohen s d (19), which measures the strength of the intervention relative to a control condition in standardized score units. A Cohen s d of.20, representing a small effect size according to published benchmarks, indicates that the means differ by.2 of a standard deviation, or, equivalently, 1 percent of the variance in the outcomes is explained by treatment group assignment. When any of the required information for computing Cohen s d was absent, it was still possible to calculate effect sizes if a study reported a T or F statistic, corresponding to a statistical test of a difference between group means. Cohen s d can be computed from these test statistics on the basis of published formulae (20). For studies reporting binary indicators of labor market participation, similar formulae were used to calculate Cohen s d. Assuming heterogeneity in the underlying effect of interventions across studies, we used a Bayesian hierarchical linear model with a random effect specification to pool information (21,22). This approach contrasts with traditional meta-regression analyses, which initially test for a heterogeneous treatment effect. Our approach estimated the between-study variance by using the pooled data to estimate the distribution of the overall treatment effect. Meta-analyses were conducted separately for the labor supply effects and the clinical outcomes. Model parameters were estimated with use of Bayesian Inference Using Gibbs Sampling (WinBUGS) software 213

3 Table 1 Characteristics of studies eligible for a meta-analysis of interventions for major depressive disorder Year Follow- Effect First pub- up Test size Study Outcome a Description author lished Control Intervention b N c (weeks) statistic p (d) SE A L1 Hours worked Agosti 1991 Placebo Drug therapy d 43 6 F=2.2 ns.389 e.318 per week B L2 Odds of being Simon 1998 Usual care Collaborative OR= unable to work f care and ( ) C1 % responding Katon 1996 Usual care Collaborative χ 2 = (by SCL-20 g ) care and (df=1) C2 % responding Katon 1996 Usual care Collaborative χ 2 = (by IDS h ) care and (df=1) C L3 Odds of being Simon 1998 Usual care Collaborative OR= unable to work f care ( ) C3 % responding Katon 1995 Usual care Collaborative χ 2 =7.83 < (by SCL-20) care (df=1) C4 % responding Katon 1995 Usual care Collaborative χ 2 =5.48 < (by IDS) care (df=1) D L4 Days of Schoen Usual care QI/prescription T= employment baum adherence L5 Days of Schoen Usual care QI/psycho T= employment baum therapy L6 % employed Schoen Usual care QI/prescription 1, Diff= baum adherence or (.01.09) C5 % depressed Wells 2000 Usual care QI/prescription 1, T= (by CIDI) i adherence or C6 % depressed Wells 2000 Usual care QI/prescription 1, T= (by CES-D) j adherence or a L1 through L6 represent labor supply effects, and C1 through C6 represent clinical outcomes of the individual studies. b Interventions are identified by their core components. QI, quality improvement. Prescription adherence indicates a strategy that promotes compliance with drug therapy. c Sample size used for calculating Cohen s d d Represents three pooled treatments (phenelzine, imipramine, and L-deprenyl) e Placebo was superior to drug, so effect size was corrected by multiplying by 1. f The effect size was recalculated to reflect a positive effect. g Symptom Checklist-90 items (20 items are depression related) h Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology i Patients screened positive for depression on the basis of the stem items for major depressive disorder and dysthymia from the 12-month Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) and additional items assessing depressed symptoms in the past month. j CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (23). WinBUGS uses Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods to generate empirical distributions for the parameters of interest through repeated application of Bayes formula, using the raw effect estimates from each study and user-specified prior distributions. Means and standard deviations for the overall treatment effect and each study-specific treatment effect were estimated from these empirical distributions, and 95 percent probability intervals were computed. The robustness of our conclusions to our model assumptions was assessed through sensitivity analysis. Because the random-effects approach involves estimation of the between-study variance of the study-specific effects, the estimate of the overall treatment effect for each of the two outcomes will be affected most by assumptions about the size of this parameter. Thus we varied our assumed precision for the prior distribution of the betweenstudy variance. We also assessed the sensitivity of the overall effect estimate to the inclusion of each individual study by systematically eliminating studies, reestimating the hierarchical linear model, and examining the size of the overall treatment effect. Finally, fixed-effects estimates those that assume no between-study variance are presented for comparison purposes. Results Our database searches identified an initial set of 706 articles, but only four studies met our inclusion criteria. In each case, clinical results and labor supply effects were collected from separate articles, except in the case of the study by Agosti and colleagues (24), for which appropriate clinical results could not be found. Characteristics of the studies are summarized in Tables 1 and 2. All tri- 214

4 Table 2 Characteristics of study participants in the intervention group in trials eligible for a meta-analysis of interventions for major depressive disorder Study a Intervention Description A Placebo Single blinded Drug therapy Phenelzine (60 90 mg/day), imipramine ( mg/day), or L-deprenyl (40 mg/day) B Usual care Often involves prescription of antidepressant medication, two to three visits over the first three months of treatment, and the option of referral for additional services Collaborative care 1. Patient education (booklet on biology of depression and cognitive-behavioral techniques, and 20-minute videotape) 2. Primary care physician training: half-day didactic sessions on antidepressant and behavioral treatment of depression and case-by-case consultations with on-site psychiatrists 3. Psychotherapist role: four to six sessions with patients, provide book explaining cognitivebehavioral methods of managing depression, screen patients for potential side effects and adherence, recommend treatment changes, and refer nonresponding patients to a psychiatrist 4. Psychotherapy: solution focused, multimodal, and involving education, skills training, and homework assignments designed to improve mood and facilitate generalization of skills to daily life. Psychotherapists were trained for 20 hours by a senior psychologist and supervised on a weekly basis C Usual care No description provided Collaborative care 1 and 2 from above, with the addition of a patient questionnaire to facilitate discussion with the primary care physicians and monthly case conferences for primary care physicians 3. Psychiatrist role: educate patients about biology of depression, mechanism of action, and potential side effects of antidepressants; review stressful life events; and monitor medication adherence 4. Increased frequency of consultations during first six weeks of treatment alternating visits between primary care physicians and psychiatrists 5. No formal D Usual care Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality depression practice guidelines distributed to practice sites Quality improvement 1. Site commitment of half of estimated costs of intervention and prescription 2. Two-day training session for local practice team leaders (primary care physician, nursing adherence supervisor, and mental health specialist) to implement the intervention 3. Physician training: monthly lectures, academic detailing, and auditing with feedback 4. Nurse training: one-day workshop for conducting clinical assessments and educating patients 5. Identification of patients through lists provided to sites 6. Nurse provides telephone or in-person follow-up for six or 12 months to support medication adherence Quality improvement 1 5 (from above) and 6. Local psychotherapists perform individual and group cognitive-behavioral therapy (12 to 16 sessions) based on common protocol a Study identifiers A through D are explained in Table 1. als were conducted in the United States during the years 1991 to The number of study participants ranged from 43 to 1,126, and participants were followed for periods ranging from six weeks to two years. The mean age of participants across studies was 41.2 years (range, 35.0 to 43.7), and a majority of participants were women (mean, 69 percent; range, 53 to 82 percent). The four trials included in this metaanalysis differed in a number of important ways, most notably in their design. The study by Agosti and colleagues (24) was an efficacy trial that compared antidepressants with placebo, whereas the other three trials evaluated primary care based quality improvement strategies aimed at providing an enhanced level of care (25 27). Most of the latter interventions included or a strategy to increase medication compliance in addition to physician and nurse education, patient education, and improved access to specialists. The two studies by Katon and colleagues (25,26) and one by Wells and colleagues (27) are known as encouragement studies in that a collaborative approach to treatment was sought but patients were not required to participate and providers were not required to comply with a formal protocol. Table 2 shows more detail of the specific interventions that were compared in these trials. In addition to differences in design, each study used a variety of measures to assess the labor market effects of the interventions. The Agosti study compared the number of hours worked each week between intervention and control groups, whereas the Katon studies measured the impact of the intervention in terms of greater odds of working at follow-up. The Wells study measured both the number of days worked in two separate intervention strategies and prescription adherence compared with 215

5 Figure 1 Forest plots of study-specific and pooled estimates of labor supply effects and clinical outcomes associated with interventions for major depressive disorder Labor supply effects Clinical outcomes 1 N= 43 A N= 54 2 N= 54 B N= 54 Outcome N= 81 N= 815 N= 855 Outcome C D E N= 81 N= 81 N= N= 1126 F N= 1126 Pooled estimate Favors usual care Favors intervention Pooled estimate Favors usual care Favors intervention Standardized effect size (Cohen's d) Standardized effect size (Cohen's d) usual care, in addition to assessing differences in employment rates at follow-up (comparing the pooled intervention strategies with usual care). Studies varied in their exclusion of persons with severe mental illness. The Katon studies explicitly excluded psychotic and suicidal persons and those with comorbid dementia or substance abuse, whereas the Agosti study did not indicate the presence of any concurrent mental illnesses in its sample. In contrast, the Wells study included participants with bipolar or alcohol use disorders. In addition, the populations were not homogeneous in terms of severity of depression. In the Katon studies, results for major and minor depression were reported separately. In the Agosti study, 25 percent of patients had major depressive disorder, 31 percent had dysthymia, and 44 percent had both major depression and dysthymia, but the effects on labor output were not stratified accordingly. The Wells study did not describe the sample s depression severity, although it reported that about half the sample had a depressive disorder of at least 12 months duration. Not all results from the included studies could be used in our analysis. Reasons for exclusion of individual effect estimates were missing baseline employment information (Wells), the fact that days of work missed were combined with school days missed (Katon), stratification of an outcome by patients clinical response status (Katon), and use of a work functioning scale (Agosti). This meta-analysis indicated that interventions for depression have significant clinical and labor market benefits. The labor supply effect of the interventions was.12 (95 percent probability interval,.002 to.24), and the effect on clinical outcomes was almost three times as large at.34, with a 95 Table 3 Study-specific and summary effects of interventions on labor supply and clinical outcomes Labor supply effects Clinical outcomes Fixed Random 95% Fixed Random 95% effects effects probability b effects effects probability b Study a estimate 95% CI estimate interval estimate 95% CI estimate interval A to to.26 B to to to to to to.84 C to to to to to to.80 D to to to to to to to to to to.21 Summary to to to to.64 a Study identifiers A through D are explained in Table 1. Between-study variance for labor supply effects was.0097, 95 percent probability interval, , and for clinical outcomes was.051, 95 percent probability interval, b Indicates that the true value of Cohen s d is contained in the interval with 95 percent probability 216

6 Table 4 Sensitivity of overall results to the exclusion of individual studies Labor supply effects Clinical outcomes 95% 95% Number probability Number probability Number of trials a of patients Cohen s d interval b of patients Cohen s d interval b All trials (N=6) 2,974 c to.24 2,522 d to.64 Eliminating one trial at a time Dropping L1 2, to.25 Dropping L2 2, to.24 Dropping L3 2, to.22 Dropping L4 to L to.53 Dropping C1 and C2 2, to.68 Dropping C3 and C4 2, to.62 Dropping C5 and C to.92 a L1 through L6 represent labor supply effects, and C1 through C6 represent clinical outcomes (see Table 1). b Indicates that the true value of Cohen s d is contained in the interval with 95% probability c N=1,848 unique patients d N=1,261 unique patients percent probability interval of.14 to.64. These results are presented in the form of a forest plot (Figure 1) and in tabular form (Table 3). The results suggest that the mean labor supply effect for the intervention groups compared with the control condition differed by about.1 of a standard deviation, whereas the mean clinical benefit between the two groups differed by about one-third of a standard deviation. Repeated simulations indicated that the probability that the intervention had an effect on labor supply was small for example,.2 on the Cohen s d scale is estimated to be only.07 but is.90 for the clinical benefit. Changing the prior mean and variance of the between-study variance distribution over a range of plausible values did not substantially change our results. For example, when the precision of the between-study variance was decreased by a factor of 1,000, our estimate of the mean effect on labor supply changed from.12 to.13. When the precision of the variance for the clinical outcomes was altered in the same manner, the mean clinical effect decreased from.34 to.29. Given the small number of studies, the overall results were sensitive to the elimination of an individual study s set of results (Table 4). The mean labor supply effect of the modified sample ranged from.03 to.13, whereas the mean clinical effect of the interventions ranged from.26 to.62. The results were most sensitive to the elimination of the estimates from the Wells study, which carried considerable weight in the main analysis because of their high precision. Discussion Our results suggest that patients with major depressive disorder benefit from the various interventions that were studied. Significant reductions in symptom severity were observed. However, the overall gain in labor output was only a third as large as the reductions in symptom severity. The fact that follow-up times for all economic end points were equal to or exceeded those for the clinical end points makes this finding even more significant. To the extent that the labor market benefits of interventions are lagged, insufficient follow-up times for the labor supply outcomes mitigated against finding larger effects. Indeed, only the study by Wells and colleagues (27), which indicated the largest gains in labor output, allowed two years of follow-up. Other explanations include the possibility of lower treatment-responsiveness for the psychological-behavioral domains that contribute to labor market participation and the potentially greater impact of market structure on labor supply, which is unaffected by these interventions. Another possible explanation for the small labor supply effects is that the benchmarks commonly used to assess the practical significance of values of Cohen s d are inappropriate for labor market outcomes. Ideally, the effect of an intervention is measured against meaningful effect sizes from previous research that both assessed labor market outcomes and used Cohen s d as a measure of effect. However, such studies could not be found. Although the labor supply effects appear small when interpreted with benchmarks commonly used in the social sciences, they might be substantively significant. The design of the trials used in our meta-analysis might have caused us to underestimate the clinical and economic gains from depression-related interventions. The participants who were enrolled in the intervention groups of the encouragement trials might have shunned higher levels of care, and primary care physicians might have varied in their enthusiasm for providing treatment. Thus lower rates of provision of care in the intervention groups are to be anticipated in studies with this design. On the other hand, because evidence-based treatments cannot ethically be withheld and nor should they be usual care groups in encouragement trials are also likely to obtain enhanced care. In fact, the Wells study indicates that members of the usual care group received a substantial level of evidence-based care. Thus so-called contamination of both intervention and control groups might have caused an underestimation of the impact of interventions. However, it is 217

7 important to note that this phenomenon does not account for the difference between the clinical and labor supply benefits we found. As with any meta-analysis, we cannot exclude the possibility that smaller studies or studies published in lowerimpact journals were missed during the database search, or that studies that reported null effects were absent from the literature altogether. Although such a possibility is purely speculative, the greater variability in this class of outcomes suggests that individual trials are underpowered to detect these effects. Accordingly, the effects we found in the published literature might have caused us to overstate the true economic benefit of depression-related interventions. Thus the observed difference between the clinical and labor supply effects is difficult to interpret because of two potential sources of bias simultaneously affecting the economic outcomes: (upward) publication bias and the (downward) bias due to their greater underlying variability vis-à-vis clinical outcomes. The small number of studies might raise concerns about the precision of our estimates and generalizability of our conclusions. Whereas typical meta-analyses combine a single summary statistic from each study, our analysis used multiple economic and clinical outcomes for each study in an attempt to pool as much information as possible. Because outcomes from the same study are not statistically independent, our approach would have overestimated the precision of the overall results. However, it is unlikely that this overestimation affected the overall study conclusions. Because we did not have access to patient-level data, we cannot be sure that the participants who improved clinically were the same ones who experienced laborrelated benefits. Thus our results should not be used to make inferences about the joint effect of these two outcomes for any particular individual. Alternative measures of labor market effects of depression interventions might have been considered, such as presenteeism (reduced functioning while at work). However, this measure has been noted as being subject to recall bias and subjectivity (28). Assessing changes in labor output provides an objective measure of impact that is useful to policy makers and employers wanting to sponsor depression-related interventions. Conclusions Results from randomized controlled trials suggest that interventions for patients with major depression can reduce depressive symptoms and increase labor output. The labor supply benefits are small relative to the improvement in clinical outcomes. The difference in effects might be due to a different underlying efficacy, a relatively brief duration of follow-up, or to extrinsic factors that affect labor supply. References 1. Ettner SL, Frank RG, Kessler RC: The impact of psychiatric disorders on labor market outcomes. Industrial and Labor Relations Review 51:64 81, Frank RG, Koss C: Mental Health, Labor Market Productivity Loss, and Restoration. Geneva, World Health Organization, Ruhm CJ: The effects of physical and mental health on female labor supply, in Economics and Mental Health. Edited by Frank RG, Manning WG. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press, Achieving the Promise: Transforming Mental Health Care in America. Rockville, Md, President s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, Kennedy JF: Message from the President of the United States Relative to Mental Illness and Mental Retardation. Washington, DC, US Government Printing Office, Harwood H, Fountain D, Livermore G: The Economic Costs of Alcohol and Drug Abuse in the United States, Rockville, Md, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General. Rockville, Md, Center for Mental Health Services, Wang PS, Simon G, Kessler RC: The economic burden of depression and the cost-effectiveness of treatment. International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research 12:22 33, Broadhead WE, Blazer DG, George LK, et al: Depression, disability days, and days lost from work in a prospective epidemiologic survey. JAMA 264: , Dewa CS, Hoch JS, Lin E, et al: Pattern of antidepressant use and duration of depression-related absence from work. British Journal of Psychiatry 183: , Miller IW, Keitner GI, Schatzberg AF, et al: The treatment of chronic depression: III. psychosocial functioning before and after treatment with sertraline or imipramine. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 59: , Schoenbaum M, Unutzer J, Sherbourne C, et al: Cost-effectiveness of practice-initiated quality improvement for depression: results of a randomized controlled trial. JAMA 286: , Simon GE, Revicki D, Heiligenstein J, et al: Recovery from depression, work productivity, and health care costs among primary care patients. General Hospital Psychiatry 22: , Hirschfeld RM, Dunner DL, Keitner G, et al: Does psychosocial functioning improve independent of depressive symptoms? A comparison of nefazodone,, and their combination. Biological Psychiatry 51: , Simon GE, Katon W, Rutter C, et al: Impact of improved depression treatment in primary care on daily functioning and disability. Psychological Medicine 28: , Schoenbaum M, Unutzer J, McCaffrey D, et al: The effects of primary care depression treatment on patients clinical status and employment. Health Services Research 37: , Mintz J, Mintz LI, Arruda MJ, et al: Treatments of depression and the functional capacity to work. Archives of General Psychiatry 49: , Berndt ER, Finkelstein SN, Greenberg PE, et al: Workplace performance effects from chronic depression and its treatment. Journal of Health Economics 17: , Rosenthal R: Parametric measures of effect size, in The Handbook of Research Synthesis. Edited by Cooper H, Hedges L. New York, Russell Sage Foundation, Rosenthal R: Meta-Analytic Procedures for Social Research. Newbury Park, Calif, Sage, Normand SL: Meta-analysis: formulating, evaluating, combining, and reporting. Statistics in Medicine 18: , DuMouchel W, Normand S: Computer- Modeling and Graphical Strategies for Metaanalysis. New York, Marcel Dekker, Spiegelhalter DJ, Thomas A, Best NG, et al: BUGS: Bayesian Inference Using Gibbs Sampling, Agosti V, Stewart JW, Quitkin FM: Life satisfaction and psychosocial functioning in chronic depression: effect of acute treatment with antidepressants. Journal of Affective Disorders 23:35 41, Katon W, Von Korff M, Lin E, et al: Collaborative management to achieve treatment guidelines: impact on depression in primary care. JAMA 273: , Katon W, Robinson P, Von Korff M, et al: A multifaceted intervention to improve treatment of depression in primary care. Archives of General Psychiatry 53: , Wells K, Sherbourne C, Schoenbaum M, et al: Impact of disseminating quality improvement programs for depression in managed primary care: a randomized controlled trial. Journal of the American Medical Association 283: , Wang PS, Beck AL, Berglund P, et al: Effects of major depression on moment-intime work performance. American Journal of Psychiatry 161: ,

Results. NeuRA Worldwide incidence April 2016

Results. NeuRA Worldwide incidence April 2016 Introduction The incidence of schizophrenia refers to how many new cases there are per population in a specified time period. It is different from prevalence, which refers to how many existing cases there

More information

Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of observational studies (MOOSE): Checklist.

Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of observational studies (MOOSE): Checklist. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of observational studies (MOOSE): Checklist. MOOSE Checklist Infliximab reduces hospitalizations and surgery interventions in patients with inflammatory bowel disease:

More information

Problem solving therapy

Problem solving therapy Introduction People with severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia may show impairments in problem-solving ability. Remediation interventions such as problem solving skills training can help people

More information

Results. NeuRA Treatments for dual diagnosis August 2016

Results. NeuRA Treatments for dual diagnosis August 2016 Introduction Many treatments have been targeted to improving symptom severity for people suffering schizophrenia in combination with substance use problems. Studies of dual diagnosis often investigate

More information

Results. NeuRA Family relationships May 2017

Results. NeuRA Family relationships May 2017 Introduction Familial expressed emotion involving hostility, emotional over-involvement, and critical comments has been associated with increased psychotic relapse in people with schizophrenia, so these

More information

Results. NeuRA Mindfulness and acceptance therapies August 2018

Results. NeuRA Mindfulness and acceptance therapies August 2018 Introduction involve intentional and non-judgmental focus of one's attention on emotions, thoughts and sensations that are occurring in the present moment. The aim is to open awareness to present experiences,

More information

The Efficacy of Paroxetine and Placebo in Treating Anxiety and Depression: A Meta-Analysis of Change on the Hamilton Rating Scales

The Efficacy of Paroxetine and Placebo in Treating Anxiety and Depression: A Meta-Analysis of Change on the Hamilton Rating Scales The Efficacy of Paroxetine and Placebo in Treating Anxiety and Depression: A Meta-Analysis of Change on the Hamilton Rating Scales The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share

More information

Animal-assisted therapy

Animal-assisted therapy Introduction Animal-assisted interventions use trained animals to help improve physical, mental and social functions in people with schizophrenia. It is a goal-directed intervention in which an animal

More information

Results. NeuRA Hypnosis June 2016

Results. NeuRA Hypnosis June 2016 Introduction may be experienced as an altered state of consciousness or as a state of relaxation. There is no agreed framework for administering hypnosis, but the procedure often involves induction (such

More information

8. DEPRESSION 1. Eve A. Kerr, M.D., M.P.H. and Kenneth A. Clark, M.D., M.P.H.

8. DEPRESSION 1. Eve A. Kerr, M.D., M.P.H. and Kenneth A. Clark, M.D., M.P.H. 8. DEPRESSION 1 Eve A. Kerr, M.D., M.P.H. and Kenneth A. Clark, M.D., M.P.H. We relied on the following sources to construct quality indicators for depression: the AHCPR Clinical Practice Guideline in

More information

NeuRA Obsessive-compulsive disorders October 2017

NeuRA Obsessive-compulsive disorders October 2017 Introduction (OCDs) involve persistent and intrusive thoughts (obsessions) and repetitive actions (compulsions). The DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition) defines

More information

Traumatic brain injury

Traumatic brain injury Introduction It is well established that traumatic brain injury increases the risk for a wide range of neuropsychiatric disturbances, however there is little consensus on whether it is a risk factor for

More information

DEPRESSION Eve A. Kerr, M.D., M.P.H.

DEPRESSION Eve A. Kerr, M.D., M.P.H. - 111-8. DEPRESSION Eve A. Kerr, M.D., M.P.H. We relied on the following sources to construct quality indicators for depression in adult women: the AHCPR Clinical Practice in Primary Care (Volumes 1 and

More information

Results. NeuRA Forensic settings April 2016

Results. NeuRA Forensic settings April 2016 Introduction Prevalence quantifies the proportion of individuals in a population who have a disease during a specific time period. Many studies have reported a high prevalence of various health problems,

More information

Treating Depression in Disadvantaged Women: What is the evidence?

Treating Depression in Disadvantaged Women: What is the evidence? Treating Depression in Disadvantaged Women: What is the evidence? Megan Dwight Johnson, MD MPH Associate Professor Medical Director, UWMC Inpatient Psychiatry Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

More information

NeuRA Sleep disturbance April 2016

NeuRA Sleep disturbance April 2016 Introduction People with schizophrenia may show disturbances in the amount, or the quality of sleep they generally receive. Typically sleep follows a characteristic pattern of four stages, where stage

More information

DEPRESSION 1 Eve Kerr, M.D., M.P.H.

DEPRESSION 1 Eve Kerr, M.D., M.P.H. - 141-7. DEPRESSION 1 Eve Kerr, M.D., M.P.H. We relied on the following sources to construct quality indicators for depression in adult women: the AHCPR Clinical Practice in Primary Care (Volumes 1 and

More information

Method. NeuRA Biofeedback May 2016

Method. NeuRA Biofeedback May 2016 Introduction is a technique in which information about the person s body is fed back to the person so that they may be trained to alter the body s conditions. Physical therapists use biofeedback to help

More information

Distraction techniques

Distraction techniques Introduction are a form of coping skills enhancement, taught during cognitive behavioural therapy. These techniques are used to distract and draw attention away from the auditory symptoms of schizophrenia,

More information

2) Percentage of adult patients (aged 18 years or older) with a diagnosis of major depression or dysthymia and an

2) Percentage of adult patients (aged 18 years or older) with a diagnosis of major depression or dysthymia and an Quality ID #370 (NQF 0710): Depression Remission at Twelve Months National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care Meaningful Measure Area: Prevention, Treatment, and Management of Mental Health

More information

PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews

PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews Review title and timescale 1 Review title Give the working title of the review. This must be in English. Ideally it should state succinctly

More information

The treatment of postnatal depression: a comprehensive literature review Boath E, Henshaw C

The treatment of postnatal depression: a comprehensive literature review Boath E, Henshaw C The treatment of postnatal depression: a comprehensive literature review Boath E, Henshaw C Authors' objectives To evalute treatments of postnatal depression. Searching MEDLINE, PsycLIT, Sociofile, CINAHL

More information

University of Groningen. Functional limitations associated with mental disorders Buist-Bouwman, Martine Albertine

University of Groningen. Functional limitations associated with mental disorders Buist-Bouwman, Martine Albertine University of Groningen Functional limitations associated with mental disorders Buist-Bouwman, Martine Albertine IMPORTANT NOTE: You are advised to consult the publisher's version (publisher's PDF) if

More information

A Pilot Study of Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Depressed Women with Breast Cancer

A Pilot Study of Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Depressed Women with Breast Cancer A Pilot Study of Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Depressed Women with Breast Cancer CARLOS BLANCO, M.D., Ph.D.* JOHN C. MARKOWITZ, M.D.* DAWN L. HERSHMAN, M.D., M.S.# JON A. LEVENSON, M.D.* SHUAI WANG,

More information

Proceedings of the International Conference on RISK MANAGEMENT, ASSESSMENT and MITIGATION

Proceedings of the International Conference on RISK MANAGEMENT, ASSESSMENT and MITIGATION COGNITIVE-BEHAVIOURAL THERAPY EFFICACY IN MAJOR DEPRESSION WITH ASSOCIATED AXIS II RISK FACTOR FOR NEGATIVE PROGNOSIS DANIEL VASILE*, OCTAVIAN VASILIU** *UMF Carol Davila Bucharest, ** Universitary Military

More information

Arif Khan 1,2, Shirin R. Khan 1, Robyn M. Leventhal 1 and Walter A. Brown 3

Arif Khan 1,2, Shirin R. Khan 1, Robyn M. Leventhal 1 and Walter A. Brown 3 International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology (2001), 4, 113 118. Copyright 2001 CINP Symptom reduction and suicide risk in patients treated with placebo in antidepressant clinical trials: a replication

More information

Results. NeuRA Treatments for internalised stigma December 2017

Results. NeuRA Treatments for internalised stigma December 2017 Introduction Internalised stigma occurs within an individual, such that a person s attitude may reinforce a negative self-perception of mental disorders, resulting in reduced sense of selfworth, anticipation

More information

Transcranial Direct-Current Stimulation

Transcranial Direct-Current Stimulation Introduction (tdcs) is a non-invasive form of brain stimulation similar to transcranial magnetic stimulation, but instead of using magnets, it uses a lowintensity, constant current applied through scalp

More information

Results. NeuRA Motor dysfunction April 2016

Results. NeuRA Motor dysfunction April 2016 Introduction Subtle deviations in various developmental trajectories during childhood and adolescence may foreshadow the later development of schizophrenia. Studies exploring these deviations (antecedents)

More information

Depression intervention via referral, education, and collaborative treatment (Project DIRECT): a pilot study

Depression intervention via referral, education, and collaborative treatment (Project DIRECT): a pilot study Executive summary of completed research Depression intervention via referral, education, and collaborative treatment (Project DIRECT): a pilot study Principal Investigator Jane McCusker, MD DrPH Co-investigators

More information

The QUOROM Statement: revised recommendations for improving the quality of reports of systematic reviews

The QUOROM Statement: revised recommendations for improving the quality of reports of systematic reviews The QUOROM Statement: revised recommendations for improving the quality of reports of systematic reviews David Moher 1, Alessandro Liberati 2, Douglas G Altman 3, Jennifer Tetzlaff 1 for the QUOROM Group

More information

Quality ID #411 (NQF 0711): Depression Remission at Six Months National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care

Quality ID #411 (NQF 0711): Depression Remission at Six Months National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care Quality ID #411 (NQF 0711): Depression Remission at Six Months National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care 2018 OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: REGISTRY ONLY MEASURE TYPE: Outcome DESCRIPTION:

More information

Depressive illness has been shown to be associated with

Depressive illness has been shown to be associated with Effect on Disability Outcomes of a Depression Relapse Prevention Program MICHAEL VON KORFF, SCD, WAYNE KATON MD, CAROLYN RUTTER, PHD, EVETTE LUDMAN, PHD, GREG SIMON, MD, MPH, ELIZABETH LIN, MD, MPH, AND

More information

1. Introduction. 2. Objectives. 2.1 Primary objective

1. Introduction. 2. Objectives. 2.1 Primary objective 1. Introduction This document describes the statistical analysis and reporting to be undertaken for paroxetine adult suicidality data. The data include trials submitted, or planned to be submitted, as

More information

Unmanaged Behavioral Health Puts Your Company At Risk. Presented by: Dr. Sam Mayhugh Integrated Behavioral Health

Unmanaged Behavioral Health Puts Your Company At Risk. Presented by: Dr. Sam Mayhugh Integrated Behavioral Health Unmanaged Behavioral Health Puts Your Company At Risk Presented by: Dr. Sam Mayhugh Integrated Behavioral Health Behavioral Health Management Webinar Overview History of BH management Prevalence of behavioral

More information

Live WebEx meeting agenda

Live WebEx meeting agenda 10:00am 10:30am Using OpenMeta[Analyst] to extract quantitative data from published literature Live WebEx meeting agenda August 25, 10:00am-12:00pm ET 10:30am 11:20am Lecture (this will be recorded) 11:20am

More information

Controlled Trials. Spyros Kitsiou, PhD

Controlled Trials. Spyros Kitsiou, PhD Assessing Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials Spyros Kitsiou, PhD Assistant Professor Department of Biomedical and Health Information Sciences College of Applied Health Sciences University of

More information

RESEARCH OBJECTIVE(S)

RESEARCH OBJECTIVE(S) Bearss, K., Johnson, C., Smith, T., Lecavalier, L., Swiezy, N., Aman, M.,... & Scahill, L. (2015). Effect of parent training vs parent education on behavioral problems in children with autism spectrum

More information

PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews

PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews Effectiveness of collaborative care in patients with combined physical disorders and depression or anxiety disorder: a systematic review

More information

Are Anti depressants Effective in the Treatment of Depressed Patients Who Do Not Seek Psychotherapy?

Are Anti depressants Effective in the Treatment of Depressed Patients Who Do Not Seek Psychotherapy? Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine DigitalCommons@PCOM PCOM Physician Assistant Studies Student Scholarship Student Dissertations, Theses and Papers 2012 Are Anti depressants Effective in the

More information

Depression in Chronic Physical Health Problems FULL GUIDELINE 1

Depression in Chronic Physical Health Problems FULL GUIDELINE 1 O Connor 2005 U.S.A. Sertraline Placebo Study design data source Patients who were hospitalised for acute coronary syndromes and who met the APA s DSMIV criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD). :

More information

The dramatic growth of managed. Use of Psychiatrists, Psychologists, and Master s-level Therapists in Managed Behavioral Health Care Carve-Out Plans

The dramatic growth of managed. Use of Psychiatrists, Psychologists, and Master s-level Therapists in Managed Behavioral Health Care Carve-Out Plans Use of Psychiatrists, Psychologists, and Master s-level Therapists in Managed Behavioral Health Care Carve-Out Plans Roland Sturm, Ph.D. Ruth Klap, Ph.D. Objective: Outpatient claims data from a managed

More information

June 2015 MRC2.CORP.D.00030

June 2015 MRC2.CORP.D.00030 This program is paid for by Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, Inc. and Lundbeck, LLC. The speaker is a paid contractor of Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, Inc. June 2015 MRC2.CORP.D.00030 advice or professional

More information

The Value of Providing Collaborative Care Models For Treating Employees with Depression

The Value of Providing Collaborative Care Models For Treating Employees with Depression The Value of Providing Collaborative Care Models For Treating Employees with Depression Summary Depression is one of the costliest health issues for employers because of its high prevalence and co-morbidity

More information

Results. NeuRA Herbal medicines August 2016

Results. NeuRA Herbal medicines August 2016 Introduction have been suggested as a potential alternative treatment which may positively contribute to the treatment of schizophrenia. Herbal therapies can include traditional Chinese medicines and Indian

More information

How do we combine two treatment arm trials with multiple arms trials in IPD metaanalysis? An Illustration with College Drinking Interventions

How do we combine two treatment arm trials with multiple arms trials in IPD metaanalysis? An Illustration with College Drinking Interventions 1/29 How do we combine two treatment arm trials with multiple arms trials in IPD metaanalysis? An Illustration with College Drinking Interventions David Huh, PhD 1, Eun-Young Mun, PhD 2, & David C. Atkins,

More information

NeuRA Decision making April 2016

NeuRA Decision making April 2016 Introduction requires an individual to use their knowledge and experience of a context in order to choose a course of action 1. A person s ability to autonomously make decisions is referred to as their

More information

Long-Term Effects on Medical Costs of Improving Depression Outcomes in Patients With Depression and Diabetes

Long-Term Effects on Medical Costs of Improving Depression Outcomes in Patients With Depression and Diabetes Epidemiology/Health Services Research O R I G I N A L A R T I C L E Long-Term Effects on Medical Costs of Improving Depression Outcomes in Patients With Depression and Diabetes WAYNE J. KATON, MD 1 JOAN

More information

2. How do different moderators (in particular, modality and orientation) affect the results of psychosocial treatment?

2. How do different moderators (in particular, modality and orientation) affect the results of psychosocial treatment? Role of psychosocial treatments in management of schizophrenia: a meta-analytic review of controlled outcome studies Mojtabai R, Nicholson R A, Carpenter B N Authors' objectives To investigate the role

More information

CRITICAL ANALYSIS PROBLEMS

CRITICAL ANALYSIS PROBLEMS CRITICAL ANALYSIS PROBLEMS MOCK EXAMINATION Paper II 2015 STIMULUS THIS STIMULUS IS NOT TO BE REMOVED FROM THE EXAMINATION ROOM DIRECTIONS To be used as a handout while answering questions. Do not answer

More information

Patients in the MIDAS Project. Exclusion Due to Bipolarity or Psychosis. Results

Patients in the MIDAS Project. Exclusion Due to Bipolarity or Psychosis. Results Things You Think You Know Things You Think You Know, That May Not Be True in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Depression Mark Zimmerman, MD Director of Outpatient Psychiatry Director of the Partial Hospital

More information

A COMPARISON OF IMPUTATION METHODS FOR MISSING DATA IN A MULTI-CENTER RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL: THE IMPACT STUDY

A COMPARISON OF IMPUTATION METHODS FOR MISSING DATA IN A MULTI-CENTER RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL: THE IMPACT STUDY A COMPARISON OF IMPUTATION METHODS FOR MISSING DATA IN A MULTI-CENTER RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL: THE IMPACT STUDY Lingqi Tang 1, Thomas R. Belin 2, and Juwon Song 2 1 Center for Health Services Research,

More information

The American healthcare system, particularly the managed

The American healthcare system, particularly the managed REPORTS Collaborative Care and Motivational Interviewing: Improving Depression Outcomes Through Patient Empowerment Interventions Bill Anderson, PharmD The American healthcare system, particularly the

More information

Pharmacotherapy for Alcohol Dependence

Pharmacotherapy for Alcohol Dependence Evidence Report/Technology Assessment: Number 3 Pharmacotherapy for Alcohol Dependence Summary Under its Evidence-Based Practice Program, the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) is developing

More information

Introduction to systematic reviews/metaanalysis

Introduction to systematic reviews/metaanalysis Introduction to systematic reviews/metaanalysis Hania Szajewska The Medical University of Warsaw Department of Paediatrics hania@ipgate.pl Do I needknowledgeon systematicreviews? Bastian H, Glasziou P,

More information

Introduction to Meta-Analysis

Introduction to Meta-Analysis Introduction to Meta-Analysis Nazım Ço galtay and Engin Karada g Abstract As a means to synthesize the results of multiple studies, the chronological development of the meta-analysis method was in parallel

More information

Epidemiologic dat a suggest that some chronic conditions, Depression In The Workplace: Effects On Short-Term Disability

Epidemiologic dat a suggest that some chronic conditions, Depression In The Workplace: Effects On Short-Term Disability Depression In The Workplace: Effects On Short-Term Disability Could treating workers depression help employers to save money on disability? These results are encouraging. by Ronald C. Kessler, Catherine

More information

Setting The setting was primary and secondary care. The economic study was carried out in the UK.

Setting The setting was primary and secondary care. The economic study was carried out in the UK. A pharmacoeconomic evaluation of escitalopram versus citalopram in the treatment of severe depression in the United Kingdom Wade A G, Toumi I, Hemels M E H Record Status This is a critical abstract of

More information

NeuRA Schizophrenia diagnosis May 2017

NeuRA Schizophrenia diagnosis May 2017 Introduction Diagnostic scales are widely used within clinical practice and research settings to ensure consistency of illness ratings. These scales have been extensively validated and provide a set of

More information

Chapter 6 Psychoeducation for depression, anxiety and psychological distress: a meta-analysis

Chapter 6 Psychoeducation for depression, anxiety and psychological distress: a meta-analysis Chapter 6 Psychoeducation for depression, anxiety and psychological distress: a meta-analysis Published: Donker, T., Griffiths, K.M., Cuijpers, P., Christensen, H., 2009. Psychoeducation for depression

More information

ISPOR Task Force Report: ITC & NMA Study Questionnaire

ISPOR Task Force Report: ITC & NMA Study Questionnaire INDIRECT TREATMENT COMPARISON / NETWORK META-ANALYSIS STUDY QUESTIONNAIRE TO ASSESS RELEVANCE AND CREDIBILITY TO INFORM HEALTHCARE DECISION-MAKING: AN ISPOR-AMCP-NPC GOOD PRACTICE TASK FORCE REPORT DRAFT

More information

Systematic Reviews and Meta- Analysis in Kidney Transplantation

Systematic Reviews and Meta- Analysis in Kidney Transplantation Systematic Reviews and Meta- Analysis in Kidney Transplantation Greg Knoll MD MSc Associate Professor of Medicine Medical Director, Kidney Transplantation University of Ottawa and The Ottawa Hospital KRESCENT

More information

A SAS Macro to Investigate Statistical Power in Meta-analysis Jin Liu, Fan Pan University of South Carolina Columbia

A SAS Macro to Investigate Statistical Power in Meta-analysis Jin Liu, Fan Pan University of South Carolina Columbia Paper 109 A SAS Macro to Investigate Statistical Power in Meta-analysis Jin Liu, Fan Pan University of South Carolina Columbia ABSTRACT Meta-analysis is a quantitative review method, which synthesizes

More information

Information about the Critically Appraised Topic (CAT) Series

Information about the Critically Appraised Topic (CAT) Series Information about the Critically Appraised Topic (CAT) Series The objective of the Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program at George Mason University is to prepare graduates for the highest level of nursing

More information

Critical appraisal: Systematic Review & Meta-analysis

Critical appraisal: Systematic Review & Meta-analysis Critical appraisal: Systematic Review & Meta-analysis Atiporn Ingsathit MD.PhD. Section for Clinical Epidemiology and biostatistics Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital Mahidol University What is a

More information

CALIFORNIA COUNTIES TREATMENT RECORD REQUIREMENTS

CALIFORNIA COUNTIES TREATMENT RECORD REQUIREMENTS CALIFORNIA COUNTIES TREATMENT RECORD REQUIREMENTS Every service provided is subject to Beacon Health Options, State of California and federal audits. All treatment records must include documentation of

More information

Evidence Based Medicine

Evidence Based Medicine Course Goals Goals 1. Understand basic concepts of evidence based medicine (EBM) and how EBM facilitates optimal patient care. 2. Develop a basic understanding of how clinical research studies are designed

More information

A brief history of the Fail Safe Number in Applied Research. Moritz Heene. University of Graz, Austria

A brief history of the Fail Safe Number in Applied Research. Moritz Heene. University of Graz, Austria History of the Fail Safe Number 1 A brief history of the Fail Safe Number in Applied Research Moritz Heene University of Graz, Austria History of the Fail Safe Number 2 Introduction Rosenthal s (1979)

More information

Author's response to reviews

Author's response to reviews Author's response to reviews Title: Effect of a multidisciplinary stress treatment programme on the return to work rate for persons with work-related stress. A non-randomized controlled study from a stress

More information

Achievements in Clinical Excellence (ACE) Measuring Effectiveness and Efficiency

Achievements in Clinical Excellence (ACE) Measuring Effectiveness and Efficiency Achievements in Clinical Excellence (ACE) Measuring Effectiveness and Efficiency November 2014 In 2009, Optum established the Campaign for Excellence (CFE) to measure clinical quality outcomes in the provider

More information

Adolescent Coping with Depression (CWD-A)

Adolescent Coping with Depression (CWD-A) This program description was created for SAMHSA s National Registry for Evidence-based Programs and Practices (NREPP). Please note that SAMHSA has discontinued the NREPP program and these program descriptions

More information

Workshop: Cochrane Rehabilitation 05th May Trusted evidence. Informed decisions. Better health.

Workshop: Cochrane Rehabilitation 05th May Trusted evidence. Informed decisions. Better health. Workshop: Cochrane Rehabilitation 05th May 2018 Trusted evidence. Informed decisions. Better health. Disclosure I have no conflicts of interest with anything in this presentation How to read a systematic

More information

Depressive disorders are common in primary care,

Depressive disorders are common in primary care, Do Clinician and Patient Adherence Predict Outcome in a Depression Disease Management Program? Catherine J. Datto, MD, Richard Thompson, PhD, David Horowitz, MD, Maureen Disbot, RN, Hillary Bogner, MD,

More information

care physicians (4 8). As a result, government agencies, accrediting organizations for example, the National Committee for Quality Assurance and

care physicians (4 8). As a result, government agencies, accrediting organizations for example, the National Committee for Quality Assurance and Aligning Incentives in the Treatment of Depression in Primary Care With Evidence-Based Practice Richard G. Frank, Ph.D. Haiden A. Huskamp, Ph.D. Harold Alan Pincus, M.D. Deficits in the quality of treatment

More information

T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S

T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S Short-term psychodynamic psychotherapies for anxiety, depression and somatoform disorders (Unknown) Abbass AA, Hancock JT, Henderson J, Kisely S This is a reprint of a Cochrane unknown, prepared and maintained

More information

Calculating clinically significant change: Applications of the Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) Scale to evaluate client outcomes in private practice

Calculating clinically significant change: Applications of the Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) Scale to evaluate client outcomes in private practice University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Papers (Archive) Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health 2010 Calculating clinically significant change: Applications

More information

Aiming for recovery for patients with severe or persistent depression a view from secondary care. Chrisvan Koen

Aiming for recovery for patients with severe or persistent depression a view from secondary care. Chrisvan Koen Aiming for recovery for patients with severe or persistent depression a view from secondary care Chrisvan Koen Kent and Medway NHS and Social care Partnership trust Persistent depressive disorder F34 Persistent

More information

The Relevance of an Employee Assistance Program to the Treatment of Workplace Depression

The Relevance of an Employee Assistance Program to the Treatment of Workplace Depression The Relevance of an Employee Assistance Program to the Treatment of Workplace Depression Melady Preece Paula M. Cayley Ulrike Scheuchl Raymond W. Lam ABSTRACT. Employees presenting to an Employee Assistance

More information

CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE (CPG)

CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE (CPG) CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE (CPG) Atiporn Ingsathit MD, PhD. 1 Rationale for Clinical Practice Guidelines Worldwide concerns about: Unexplained variations in clinical practice Rising

More information

Results. NeuRA Essential fatty acids August 2016

Results. NeuRA Essential fatty acids August 2016 Introduction Alternative treatments are investigated as a possible replacement for antipsychotic medication, which can be associated with severe side effects. Alternative therapies may have less debilitating

More information

Eivind Aakhus 1,2*, Ingeborg Granlund 2, Jan Odgaard-Jensen 2, Andrew D. Oxman 2 and Signe A. Flottorp 2,3

Eivind Aakhus 1,2*, Ingeborg Granlund 2, Jan Odgaard-Jensen 2, Andrew D. Oxman 2 and Signe A. Flottorp 2,3 Aakhus et al. Implementation Science (2016) 11:32 DOI 10.1186/s13012-016-0397-3 RESEARCH A tailored intervention to implement guideline recommendations for elderly patients with depression in primary care:

More information

1 1 Evidence-based pharmacotherapy of major depressive disorder. Michael J. Ostacher, Jeffrey Huffman, Roy Perlis, and Andrew A.

1 1 Evidence-based pharmacotherapy of major depressive disorder. Michael J. Ostacher, Jeffrey Huffman, Roy Perlis, and Andrew A. 1 1 Evidence-based pharmacotherapy of major depressive disorder Michael J. Ostacher, Jeffrey Huffman, Roy Perlis, and Andrew A. Nierenberg Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard University, Boston,

More information

Depression in the Workplace: Detailed Analysis of TBGH s 2016 Survey of Texas Employers. November 28, 2016

Depression in the Workplace: Detailed Analysis of TBGH s 2016 Survey of Texas Employers. November 28, 2016 Depression in the Workplace: Detailed Analysis of TBGH s 2016 Survey of Texas Employers November 28, 2016 Depression in the Workplace: Detailed Analysis of TBGH s 2016 Survey of Texas Employers Contents

More information

GRADE. Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation. British Association of Dermatologists April 2018

GRADE. Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation. British Association of Dermatologists April 2018 GRADE Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation British Association of Dermatologists April 2018 Previous grading system Level of evidence Strength of recommendation Level of evidence

More information

What is indirect comparison?

What is indirect comparison? ...? series New title Statistics Supported by sanofi-aventis What is indirect comparison? Fujian Song BMed MMed PhD Reader in Research Synthesis, Faculty of Health, University of East Anglia Indirect comparison

More information

SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION

SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION Risk factors for the development and outcome of childhood psychopathology SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION Chapter 147 In this chapter I present a summary of the results of the studies described in this thesis followed

More information

Depression is a common mental. A Community Study of Depression Treatment and Employment Earnings

Depression is a common mental. A Community Study of Depression Treatment and Employment Earnings A Community Study of Depression Treatment and Employment Earnings Mingliang Zhang, Ph.D. Kathryn M. Rost, Ph.D. John C. Fortney, Ph.D. G. Richard Smith, M.D. Objective: Although treatment for major depression

More information

Study No.: Title: Rationale: Phase: Study Period: Study Design: Centers: Indication: Treatment: Objectives: Primary Outcome/Efficacy Variable:

Study No.: Title: Rationale: Phase: Study Period: Study Design: Centers: Indication: Treatment: Objectives: Primary Outcome/Efficacy Variable: The study listed may include approved and non-approved uses, formulations or treatment regimens. The results reported in any single study may not reflect the overall results obtained on studies of a product.

More information

Research Synthesis and meta-analysis: themes. Graham A. Colditz, MD, DrPH Method Tuuli, MD, MPH

Research Synthesis and meta-analysis: themes. Graham A. Colditz, MD, DrPH Method Tuuli, MD, MPH Research Synthesis and meta-analysis: themes Graham A. Colditz, MD, DrPH Method Tuuli, MD, MPH Today Course format Goals, competencies Overview of themes for the class SRMA M19-551 Course Format Lectures»

More information

Advanced Bayesian Models for the Social Sciences. TA: Elizabeth Menninga (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)

Advanced Bayesian Models for the Social Sciences. TA: Elizabeth Menninga (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) Advanced Bayesian Models for the Social Sciences Instructors: Week 1&2: Skyler J. Cranmer Department of Political Science University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill skyler@unc.edu Week 3&4: Daniel Stegmueller

More information

UPDATE April 5, 2006 BRIEFING DOCUMENT. Paroxetine Adult Suicidality Analysis: Major Depressive Disorder and Non- Major Depressive Disorder

UPDATE April 5, 2006 BRIEFING DOCUMENT. Paroxetine Adult Suicidality Analysis: Major Depressive Disorder and Non- Major Depressive Disorder UPDATE April 5, 2006 BRIEFING DOCUMENT Paroxetine Adult Suicidality Analysis: Major Depressive Disorder and Non- Major Depressive Disorder 1. Introduction Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)

More information

CADET: Clinical & Cost Effectiveness of Collaborative Care for Depression in UK Primary Care: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial

CADET: Clinical & Cost Effectiveness of Collaborative Care for Depression in UK Primary Care: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial CADET: Clinical & Cost Effectiveness of Collaborative Care for Depression in UK Primary Care: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial David Richards, PhD "This presentation reports independent research funded

More information

18/11/2013. An Introduction to Meta-analysis. In this session: What is meta-analysis? Some Background Clinical Trials. What questions are addressed?

18/11/2013. An Introduction to Meta-analysis. In this session: What is meta-analysis? Some Background Clinical Trials. What questions are addressed? In this session: What is meta-analysis? An Introduction to Meta-analysis Geoff Der Unit Statistician MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow When is it appropriate to use?

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY DATA. Supplementary Figure S1. Search terms*

SUPPLEMENTARY DATA. Supplementary Figure S1. Search terms* Supplementary Figure S1. Search terms* *mh = exploded MeSH: Medical subject heading (Medline medical index term); tw = text word; pt = publication type; the asterisk (*) stands for any character(s) #1:

More information

Addressing multiple treatments II: multiple-treatments meta-analysis basic methods

Addressing multiple treatments II: multiple-treatments meta-analysis basic methods Deborah Caldwell and Georgia Salanti d.m.caldwell@bristol.ac.uk Addressing multiple treatments II: multiple-treatments meta-analysis basic methods Keystone, 2010 18 th Cochrane Colloquium, 18 th to 22

More information

Meta-Analysis. Zifei Liu. Biological and Agricultural Engineering

Meta-Analysis. Zifei Liu. Biological and Agricultural Engineering Meta-Analysis Zifei Liu What is a meta-analysis; why perform a metaanalysis? How a meta-analysis work some basic concepts and principles Steps of Meta-analysis Cautions on meta-analysis 2 What is Meta-analysis

More information

Integrating MH/SA Treatment in Primary Care Firm Clinics: The Behavioral Health Clinic

Integrating MH/SA Treatment in Primary Care Firm Clinics: The Behavioral Health Clinic Integrating MH/SA Treatment in Primary Care Firm Clinics: The Behavioral Health Clinic John D. Dingell VA Medical Center VISN 11 - Detroit, MI Objectives Upon completion of this session, participants will

More information

Handbook for Postdoctoral Fellows at The Menninger Clinic

Handbook for Postdoctoral Fellows at The Menninger Clinic Handbook for Postdoctoral Fellows at The Menninger Clinic 2017-2018 Chris Fowler, Ph.D., director of Psychology Patricia Daza, PhD, director of Psychology Training 1 Overview The psychology discipline

More information

Effective Treatment of Depression in Older African Americans: Overcoming Barriers

Effective Treatment of Depression in Older African Americans: Overcoming Barriers Effective Treatment of Depression in Older African Americans: Overcoming Barriers R U T H S H I M, M D, M P H A S S I S T A N T P R O F E S S O R, D E P A R T M E N T O F P S Y C H I A T R Y A N D B E

More information

Comorbidity With Substance Abuse P a g e 1

Comorbidity With Substance Abuse P a g e 1 Comorbidity With Substance Abuse P a g e 1 Comorbidity With Substance Abuse Introduction This interesting session provided an overview of recent findings in the diagnosis and treatment of several psychiatric

More information