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Collaborative care for depression in UK primary care: a randomized controlled trial

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posted on 2025-07-30, 15:18 authored by David Richards, Karina Lovell, Simon Gilbody, L Gask, D Torgerson, M Barkham, M Bland, Peter Bower, A.J Lankshear, A Simpson, J Fletcher, D Escott, Sue Hennessy, R Richardson
Background. Collaborative care is an effective intervention for depression which includes both organizational and patient-level intervention components. The effect in the UK is unknown, as is whether cluster- or patient-randomization would be the most appropriate design for a Phase III clinical trial. Method. We undertook a Phase II patient-level randomized controlled trial in primary care, nested within a clusterrandomized trial. Depressed participants were randomized to ‘collaborative care’ – case manager-coordinated medication support and brief psychological treatment, enhanced specialist and GP communication – or a usual care control. The primary outcome was symptoms of depression (PHQ-9). Results. We recruited 114 participants, 41 to the intervention group, 38 to the patient-randomized control group and 35 to the cluster-randomized control group. For the intervention compared to the cluster control the PHQ-9 effect size was 0.63 (95% CI 0.18–1.07). There was evidence of substantial contamination between intervention and patient-randomized control participants with less difference between the intervention group and patient-randomized control group (-2.99, 95% CI -7.56 to 1.58, p=0.186) than between the intervention and cluster-randomized control group (-4.64, 95% CI -7.93 to -1.35, p=0.008). The intra-class correlation coefficient for our primary outcome was 0.06 (95% CI 0.00–0.32). Conclusions. Collaborative care is a potentially powerful organizational intervention for improving depression treatment in UK primary care, the effect of which is probably partly mediated through the organizational aspects of the intervention. A large Phase III cluster-randomized trial is required to provide the most methodologically accurate test of these initial encouraging findings.

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Reproduced with permission of the publisher. © 2008 Cambridge University Press.

Journal

Psychological Medicine

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 38 (2); pp. 279-287

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