Technology-Assisted Collaborative Care Program for People with Diabetes and/or High Blood Pressure Attending Primary Health Care: A Feasibility Study

The comorbidity of depression with physical chronic diseases is usually not considered in clinical guidelines. This study evaluated the feasibility of a technology-assisted collaborative care (TCC) program for depression in people with diabetes and/or high blood pressure (DM/HBP) attending a primary...

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Autores principales: Pablo Martínez, Viviana Guajardo, Víctor E. Gómez, Sebastián Brandt, Wilsa Szabo, Gonzalo Soto-Brandt, Maryam Farhang, Paulina Baeza, Solange Campos, Pablo Herrera, Graciela Rojas
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Publicado: MDPI AG 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/c127e2dd4b314586a52ed13e00f03f02
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:c127e2dd4b314586a52ed13e00f03f022021-11-25T17:50:13ZTechnology-Assisted Collaborative Care Program for People with Diabetes and/or High Blood Pressure Attending Primary Health Care: A Feasibility Study10.3390/ijerph1822120001660-46011661-7827https://doaj.org/article/c127e2dd4b314586a52ed13e00f03f022021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/22/12000https://doaj.org/toc/1661-7827https://doaj.org/toc/1660-4601The comorbidity of depression with physical chronic diseases is usually not considered in clinical guidelines. This study evaluated the feasibility of a technology-assisted collaborative care (TCC) program for depression in people with diabetes and/or high blood pressure (DM/HBP) attending a primary health care (PHC) facility in Santiago, Chile. Twenty people diagnosed with DM/HBP having a Patient Health Questionnaire-9 score ≥ 15 points were recruited. The TCC program consisted of a face-to-face, computer-assisted psychosocial intervention (CPI, five biweekly sessions), telephone monitoring (TM), and a mobile phone application for behavioral activation (CONEMO). Assessments of depressive symptoms and other health-related outcomes were made. Thirteen patients completed the CAPI, 12 received TM, and none tried CONEMO. The TCC program was potentially efficacious in treating depression, with two-thirds of participants achieving response to depression treatment 12 weeks after baseline. Decreases were observed in depressive symptoms and healthcare visits and increases in mental health-related quality of life and adherence to treatment. Patients perceived the CPI as acceptable. The TCC program was partially feasible and potentially efficacious for managing depression in people with DM/HBP. These data are valuable inputs for a future randomized clinical trial.Pablo MartínezViviana GuajardoVíctor E. GómezSebastián BrandtWilsa SzaboGonzalo Soto-BrandtMaryam FarhangPaulina BaezaSolange CamposPablo HerreraGraciela RojasMDPI AGarticledepressionchronic diseasedisease managementprimary health careinformation technologyfeasibility studiesMedicineRENInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol 18, Iss 12000, p 12000 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic depression
chronic disease
disease management
primary health care
information technology
feasibility studies
Medicine
R
spellingShingle depression
chronic disease
disease management
primary health care
information technology
feasibility studies
Medicine
R
Pablo Martínez
Viviana Guajardo
Víctor E. Gómez
Sebastián Brandt
Wilsa Szabo
Gonzalo Soto-Brandt
Maryam Farhang
Paulina Baeza
Solange Campos
Pablo Herrera
Graciela Rojas
Technology-Assisted Collaborative Care Program for People with Diabetes and/or High Blood Pressure Attending Primary Health Care: A Feasibility Study
description The comorbidity of depression with physical chronic diseases is usually not considered in clinical guidelines. This study evaluated the feasibility of a technology-assisted collaborative care (TCC) program for depression in people with diabetes and/or high blood pressure (DM/HBP) attending a primary health care (PHC) facility in Santiago, Chile. Twenty people diagnosed with DM/HBP having a Patient Health Questionnaire-9 score ≥ 15 points were recruited. The TCC program consisted of a face-to-face, computer-assisted psychosocial intervention (CPI, five biweekly sessions), telephone monitoring (TM), and a mobile phone application for behavioral activation (CONEMO). Assessments of depressive symptoms and other health-related outcomes were made. Thirteen patients completed the CAPI, 12 received TM, and none tried CONEMO. The TCC program was potentially efficacious in treating depression, with two-thirds of participants achieving response to depression treatment 12 weeks after baseline. Decreases were observed in depressive symptoms and healthcare visits and increases in mental health-related quality of life and adherence to treatment. Patients perceived the CPI as acceptable. The TCC program was partially feasible and potentially efficacious for managing depression in people with DM/HBP. These data are valuable inputs for a future randomized clinical trial.
format article
author Pablo Martínez
Viviana Guajardo
Víctor E. Gómez
Sebastián Brandt
Wilsa Szabo
Gonzalo Soto-Brandt
Maryam Farhang
Paulina Baeza
Solange Campos
Pablo Herrera
Graciela Rojas
author_facet Pablo Martínez
Viviana Guajardo
Víctor E. Gómez
Sebastián Brandt
Wilsa Szabo
Gonzalo Soto-Brandt
Maryam Farhang
Paulina Baeza
Solange Campos
Pablo Herrera
Graciela Rojas
author_sort Pablo Martínez
title Technology-Assisted Collaborative Care Program for People with Diabetes and/or High Blood Pressure Attending Primary Health Care: A Feasibility Study
title_short Technology-Assisted Collaborative Care Program for People with Diabetes and/or High Blood Pressure Attending Primary Health Care: A Feasibility Study
title_full Technology-Assisted Collaborative Care Program for People with Diabetes and/or High Blood Pressure Attending Primary Health Care: A Feasibility Study
title_fullStr Technology-Assisted Collaborative Care Program for People with Diabetes and/or High Blood Pressure Attending Primary Health Care: A Feasibility Study
title_full_unstemmed Technology-Assisted Collaborative Care Program for People with Diabetes and/or High Blood Pressure Attending Primary Health Care: A Feasibility Study
title_sort technology-assisted collaborative care program for people with diabetes and/or high blood pressure attending primary health care: a feasibility study
publisher MDPI AG
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/c127e2dd4b314586a52ed13e00f03f02
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