Hernandez Juliette V, Harman Jeffrey S
Florida State University College of Medicine, 1115 W Call St, Tallahassee, FL, 32304, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Aug 29. doi: 10.1007/s40615-024-02081-2.
Chronic disease and depression are closely related, and depression, if left untreated, can worsen physical disease symptoms. Furthermore, treating depression can improve patient outcomes. Generally, treatment for depression is lower in minority groups.
The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between chronic disease burden and depression treatment and whether that relationship differs between white to non-white patient visits to primary care physicians.
We conducted a quantitative secondary data analysis using data from 2014-2019 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS).
Visits by adults with depression to primary care physicians (n = 3832).
Logistic regressions estimated the odds of medication treatment, mental health counseling treatment, and any treatment.
Visits by patients with 3 or more chronic conditions had 1.39 times the odds of receiving medication treatment (p-value = 0.06). However, when examining treatment by race, visits by white patients with 1-2 chronic conditions had 3.04 times the odds of receiving mental health treatment (p-value = 0.09) compared to visits by non-white patients and 2.09 times the odds of receiving any treatment (p-value = 0.08) compared to visits by non-white patients.
Although not significant at the p < .05 level, the results suggest that the odds of depression treatment is greater during visits by patients with multiple co-occurring chronic conditions compared to visits by people without chronic conditions. It appears that this effect is larger for visits by white patients compared to visits by non-white patients. Further research is needed to confirm these findings and determine how this association impacts minorities distinctly and what could be the reason behind the disparity. These findings could help physicians be aware of ongoing disparities in depression treatment and provide more equitable depression treatment.
慢性病与抑郁症密切相关,若抑郁症得不到治疗,会使身体疾病症状恶化。此外,治疗抑郁症可改善患者预后。一般来说,少数群体中抑郁症的治疗率较低。
本研究旨在确定慢性病负担与抑郁症治疗之间的关系,以及这种关系在白人患者与非白人患者就诊于初级保健医生时是否存在差异。
我们使用2014 - 2019年国家门诊医疗调查(NAMCS)的数据进行了定量二次数据分析。
患有抑郁症的成年人就诊于初级保健医生(n = 3832)。
逻辑回归估计药物治疗、心理健康咨询治疗以及任何治疗的几率。
患有3种或更多慢性病的患者就诊时接受药物治疗的几率是1.39倍(p值 = 0.06)。然而,在按种族检查治疗情况时,患有1 - 2种慢性病的白人患者就诊时接受心理健康治疗的几率是非白人患者就诊时的3.04倍(p值 = 0.09),接受任何治疗的几率是非白人患者就诊时的2.09倍(p值 = 0.08)。
尽管在p < 0.05水平上不显著,但结果表明,与无慢性病的患者就诊相比,患有多种慢性病的患者就诊时接受抑郁症治疗的几率更高。与非白人患者就诊相比,白人患者就诊时这种效应似乎更大。需要进一步研究来证实这些发现,并确定这种关联如何对少数群体产生独特影响以及差异背后的原因可能是什么。这些发现有助于医生意识到抑郁症治疗中持续存在的差异,并提供更公平的抑郁症治疗。