TY - JOUR
T1 - Does patient-provider gender concordance affect mental health care received by primary care patients with major depression?
AU - Chan, Kitty S.
AU - Bird, Chloe E.
AU - Weiss, Robert
AU - Duan, Naihua
AU - Meredith, Lisa S.
AU - Sherbourne, Cathy D.
N1 - Funding Information:
Supported by the National Institutes of Mental Health (R01MH64658, P50MH54623), the Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality (R01-HS08349), and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Grant No. 96-42901A-HE. We thank Bernadette Benjamin for expert programming and we are grateful to Christy Klein, Maureen Carney, and Chantal Avila for help in the PIC study; Carole Oken and Mary Abdun-Nur for help in the MHAP study; Jeff Smith, Carl Elliot, and Paul Nutting for help in the QuEST study; Christine Nelson, Ray Turner, Tracey Hare, Hong Vu, and Jose Arbelaez for help in HQID and the combined database; Kathryn Magruder for help with the overall collaboration; and Bob Bell for statistical consultation.
Copyright:
Copyright 2008 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2006/5
Y1 - 2006/5
N2 - Purpose: We sought to determine whether patient-provider gender concordance influences the detection and care of depression and comorbid anxiety and substance use in patients with major depression. Methods: Cross-sectional analyses of baseline patient survey data linked with provider data were performed. Data based on routine primary care visits in clinics from a variety of health systems serving diverse patient populations across the United States. Participants all had major depression. Depression care was examined in the Quality Improvement for Depression (QID) Collaboration sample (n patients = 1,428, n providers = 389). In a subanalysis of data solely from 714 patients and 157 providers from Partners-In-Care, one of the projects participating in QID, we also examined detection of anxiety disorder and alcohol or drug problems. Main Findings: Rates of detection and care of mental health problems in primary care were low even among patients with major depression. Except for anxiety counseling in female patients, patient-provider gender concordance did not improve care as hypothesized. However, female providers were more likely to counsel on anxiety and less likely to counsel on alcohol or drug use than male providers. Female patients were less likely to be counseled on alcohol or drug use compared with male patients. Conclusion: Detection and care of mental health and substance use problems for patients with major depression is not influenced by patient-provider gender concordance. However, depressed female patients may have greater unmet needs for alcohol and drug use counseling than their male counterparts.
AB - Purpose: We sought to determine whether patient-provider gender concordance influences the detection and care of depression and comorbid anxiety and substance use in patients with major depression. Methods: Cross-sectional analyses of baseline patient survey data linked with provider data were performed. Data based on routine primary care visits in clinics from a variety of health systems serving diverse patient populations across the United States. Participants all had major depression. Depression care was examined in the Quality Improvement for Depression (QID) Collaboration sample (n patients = 1,428, n providers = 389). In a subanalysis of data solely from 714 patients and 157 providers from Partners-In-Care, one of the projects participating in QID, we also examined detection of anxiety disorder and alcohol or drug problems. Main Findings: Rates of detection and care of mental health problems in primary care were low even among patients with major depression. Except for anxiety counseling in female patients, patient-provider gender concordance did not improve care as hypothesized. However, female providers were more likely to counsel on anxiety and less likely to counsel on alcohol or drug use than male providers. Female patients were less likely to be counseled on alcohol or drug use compared with male patients. Conclusion: Detection and care of mental health and substance use problems for patients with major depression is not influenced by patient-provider gender concordance. However, depressed female patients may have greater unmet needs for alcohol and drug use counseling than their male counterparts.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.whi.2006.03.003
DO - 10.1016/j.whi.2006.03.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 16765288
AN - SCOPUS:33744764899
SN - 1049-3867
VL - 16
SP - 122
EP - 132
JO - Women's Health Issues
JF - Women's Health Issues
IS - 3
ER -