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Implementing collaborative care for major depression in a cancer center: An observational study using mixed-methods

Implementing collaborative care for major depression in a cancer center: An observational study using mixed-methods
Implementing collaborative care for major depression in a cancer center: An observational study using mixed-methods

Objectives: To describe the implementation of a collaborative care (CC) screening and treatment program for major depression in people with cancer, found to be effective in clinical trials, into routine outpatient care of a cancer center. Method: A mixed-methods observational study guided by the RE-AIM implementation framework using quantitative and qualitative data collected over five years. Results: Program set-up took three years and required more involvement of CC experts than anticipated. Barriers to implementation were uncertainty about whether oncology or psychiatry owned the program and the hospital's organizational complexity. Selecting and training CC team members was a major task. 90% (14,412/16,074) of patients participated in depression screening and 61% (136/224) of those offered treatment attended at least one session. Depression outcomes were similar to trial benchmarks (61%; 78/127 patients had a treatment response). After two years the program obtained long-term funding. Facilitators of implementation were strong trial evidence, effective integration into cancer care and ongoing clinical and managerial support. Conclusion: A CC program for major depression, designed for the cancer setting, can be successfully implemented into routine care, but requires time, persistence and involvement of CC experts. Once operating it can be an effective and valued component of medical care.

Cancer, Collaborative care, Depression, Implementation
0163-8343
3-15
Walker, Jane
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Hobbs, Harriet
262a32c9-a21e-4695-9e22-104374af6584
Wanat, Marta
06bd38ef-2f81-4a13-ab42-ad43c404e85d
Solomons, Luke
b556be15-b543-48e2-a19f-bf008d5c3d01
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Sevdalis, Nick
3aa4f0f5-1314-45e8-b93d-220eeb822cab
Magill, Nicholas
f6b22d09-90ea-42a6-b94d-42239ad94766
Sharpe, Michael
7c77f2a0-2b8a-42b2-beda-afa88edf4ab3
Walker, Jane
fd514b7f-9f67-424c-a56a-e1751feccce9
Hobbs, Harriet
262a32c9-a21e-4695-9e22-104374af6584
Wanat, Marta
06bd38ef-2f81-4a13-ab42-ad43c404e85d
Solomons, Luke
b556be15-b543-48e2-a19f-bf008d5c3d01
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Sevdalis, Nick
3aa4f0f5-1314-45e8-b93d-220eeb822cab
Magill, Nicholas
f6b22d09-90ea-42a6-b94d-42239ad94766
Sharpe, Michael
7c77f2a0-2b8a-42b2-beda-afa88edf4ab3

Walker, Jane, Hobbs, Harriet, Wanat, Marta, Solomons, Luke, Richardson, Alison, Sevdalis, Nick, Magill, Nicholas and Sharpe, Michael (2022) Implementing collaborative care for major depression in a cancer center: An observational study using mixed-methods. General Hospital Psychiatry, 76, 3-15. (doi:10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2022.03.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: To describe the implementation of a collaborative care (CC) screening and treatment program for major depression in people with cancer, found to be effective in clinical trials, into routine outpatient care of a cancer center. Method: A mixed-methods observational study guided by the RE-AIM implementation framework using quantitative and qualitative data collected over five years. Results: Program set-up took three years and required more involvement of CC experts than anticipated. Barriers to implementation were uncertainty about whether oncology or psychiatry owned the program and the hospital's organizational complexity. Selecting and training CC team members was a major task. 90% (14,412/16,074) of patients participated in depression screening and 61% (136/224) of those offered treatment attended at least one session. Depression outcomes were similar to trial benchmarks (61%; 78/127 patients had a treatment response). After two years the program obtained long-term funding. Facilitators of implementation were strong trial evidence, effective integration into cancer care and ongoing clinical and managerial support. Conclusion: A CC program for major depression, designed for the cancer setting, can be successfully implemented into routine care, but requires time, persistence and involvement of CC experts. Once operating it can be an effective and valued component of medical care.

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 March 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 March 2022
Published date: 1 May 2022
Keywords: Cancer, Collaborative care, Depression, Implementation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 456275
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456275
ISSN: 0163-8343
PURE UUID: 6a50b741-d44f-4a59-92b7-b1dcffd0d703
ORCID for Alison Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3127-5755

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Date deposited: 27 Apr 2022 00:58
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:19

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Contributors

Author: Jane Walker
Author: Harriet Hobbs
Author: Marta Wanat
Author: Luke Solomons
Author: Nick Sevdalis
Author: Nicholas Magill
Author: Michael Sharpe

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