Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised Controlled Trial of a Letter Intervention in Primary Care Patients to Improve Depression and Anxiety Disorders
Currently patients thought to have anxiety or depression by their GPs are referred to the
Primary Mental Health Team (PMHEIT) for psychiatric assessment. This assessment consists of
a one-hour interview with a senior psychiatry registrar or psychiatrist, who then writes a
letter to the referring GP. The letter contains diagnostic information and management
recommendations. It is not current practice to send a copy of this letter to the patient. We
hypothesize that patients who receive a copy of the psychiatric assessment letter that is
sent to GPs will improve adherence to treatment recommendations; and that patients who
receive a copy of the letter will have improved outcomes.
GPs will be asked to agree to the participation of their patients. Participants will be
persons over the age of 18 years who are referred to the PMHEIT for assessment and who
receive primary diagnoses of depression or anxiety. After the assessment interview, the
patient will be given an explanatory letter and a consent form. Consenting patients will
complete the Depression and Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS) and a SF12 questionnaire to measure
the level of disability they are experiencing due to their mental condition.
Participants will be randomly allocated into two groups: a control group who will not
receive a copy of the assessment letter, and an experimental group who will be mailed a copy
of the same information that their GP receives. The registrar who conducts the assessment
and writes the report will not know to which group each participant has been assigned. Thus,
the content of the letter will not be affected by knowledge that the patient will or will
not see it. The letter will be sent simultaneously to the referring GP and to experimental
group participants. To ensure confidentiality, the letter will be sent by registered mail.
Three weeks later, participants will be mailed a copy of the DASS. After a week, they will
be contacted by phone and asked for their DASS responses. They will also be asked a brief
series of questions regarding their adherence to the treatment recommendations given in
their assessment letter. When adherence is partial or absent, the interviewer will attempt
to ascertain the reason. This procedure will be repeated at 3 months, except that assessment
on the SF12 will also take place.
In 2004, the UK National Health Service mandated the practice of sending patients copies of
all correspondence between clinicians involved in their care. Such a policy is consistent
with the principle of autonomy and with the right of the patient to access information about
themselves (Somerville, 1994). It is also supportive of a collaborative model of service
delivery in which patients are viewed as active agents in their own wellbeing, as opposed to
passive recipients of treatment.
Letter interventions have boosted attendance rates for cervical screening (McDowell, Newell
& Rosser, 1989a), blood pressure checks (McDowell, Newell & Rosser, 1989b), and mammography
follow-up (Saywell et al., 2003). They have also resulted in improved adherence to
antihypertensive medications and lipid lowering agents (Atthobari, Monster & de Jong-van den
Berg, 2004). However, caution has been urged in relation to the use of letters in some
patient subpopulations, such as persons who lack the capacity to consent and patients who
have psychiatric diagnoses (Jelley, van Zwanenberg & Walker, 2002).
Despite these cautions, psychiatric patients react positively to the idea of receiving a
copy of the letters containing clinical information that are routinely sent to their GP. At
least three quarters of patients who had never received such a letter wished to do so (Dale,
Tadros, Adams & Deshpande, 2004; Marzanski, Musunuri & Coupe, 2005), and at least 80% of
patients who had received a letter supported the practice (Asch, Price & Hawks, 1991;
Nandhra, Murray, Hymas & Hunt, 2004). Most psychiatric patients wished to continue to
receive such letters, and a number commented that "seeing their problems understood and
described objectively helped them to gain perspective" (Nandhra et al., 2004, p. 41).
Some psychiatric patients and practitioners, even those who favour letter interventions in
principle, have expressed reservations. One commonly expressed concern is over the
preservation of patient confidentiality, especially with regard to psychiatric reports that
containing highly personal information (see, for example, Marzanski et al., 2005; Nandhra et
al., 2004). To date, however, there have been no reported breaches of confidentiality in
Britain. In fact, most patients are happy for letters to be mailed to them, as are the
carers of patients with dementia (Harris & Boaden, 2003). Some patients and practitioners
are also concerned that the contents of the letter may cause distress (Marzanski et al.,
2005; Nandhra et al., 2004). However, the reaction reported by most psychiatric patients
themselves was that when they read the letter they did not experience any distress at all. A
minority of patients did initially feel distress, but they reported that once they had
regained composure they found the letter helpful and were glad they had received it (Nandhra
et al.).
An issue that has not yet been clarified is whether receipt of a letter improves adherence
to treatment recommendations in cases of psychiatric illness. This is a critical issue; a
recent review of adherence to antidepressant medication found drop out rates as high as 33%
(Pampallona & Bollini, 2002). The major aim of the current study is to establish whether
adherence to treatment is boosted by a letter intervention. If such an effect is found, it
should follow that increased adherence leads to improved reduction in the severity of
symptoms, and consequently to improved patient outcomes.
Hypotheses: (1) that receiving the assessment report will improve patient adherence to
treatment recommendations; (2) that receiving the assessment report will improve patient
outcomes.
Method:
Participants: 200 patients over the age of 18 years who are referred to the Primary Mental
Health Team for assessment and who receive primary diagnoses of a depressive or anxiety
disorder will participate.
Design: A Group (control v. experimental) x Time (baseline x 1 month x 3 month) x Condition
(depressive disorder v. anxiety disorder) will measure (a) patient adherence to treatment
recommendations and (b) the severity of symptoms. In addition, qualitative analysis of
reasons for suboptimal adherence to treatment recommendations will be performed.
Procedure: Consent will be sought from General Practitioners who refer patients to the
PMHEIT for psychiatric assessment (see Appendix A). The patients of consenting GPs will form
the participant pool. It is current practice that on referral, patients are given a brochure
that explains the function of the PMHEIT and the assessment procedure. This brochure
contains a section alerting the patient to the fact that they may be asked to participate in
research (see Appendix B). After the clinical interview, patients will be given a
participant consent form which contains information on the research (see Appendix C). If
consent is obtained, patients will complete the Depression and Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS)
and the SF12 questionnaire (a measure of disability). Those whose primary diagnosis is any
anxiety or depressive disorder will be selected for inclusion in the trial.
Participants will be randomly assigned to control and experimental groups. For patients
assigned to the experimental group, the assessment report will be simultaneously sent to the
GP and by registered mail to the patient. Reports will be mailed to referring GPs of control
group participants, but will not be mailed to the patient themselves. These patients will be
mailed a thank-you letter reminding them of the next follow up call (see Appendix D).
Three weeks after the assessment interview, all participants will be mailed a copy of the
DASS and a reminder letter. One week later, a researcher attached to the Primary Mental
Health Team will contact the participant by phone. She will ask the participant for his/her
responses to the DASS items and will ask a short series of questions regarding adherence to
the treatment recommendations. Where adherence is partial or absent, the interviewer will
ask the reasons (see Appendix E). This procedure will be repeated three months after the
initial interview, when the SF12 will also be administered. On completion of the research,
all participants and their GPs will be mailed a summary of the research findings.
Inclusion/exclusion criteria: Criteria for inclusion consist of any of the DSM IV anxiety
disorders or depressive disorders. Exclusion criteria will include a primary substance abuse
disorder (though co-morbid substance abuse will not be an exclusion criterion), significant
personality disorder, psychosis, high suicidal risk or risk of harm to others, or inability
to speak and read English to a standard that allows independent completion of the
questionnaires. Clinician discretion will also be used to exclude participants for whom a
letter would be contraindicated. Assessing clinicians will indicate on their record of
assessment if inclusion in the study is not contraindicated.
Randomisation procedures: Patients will be allocated to groups based on a random number
sequence recorded in sealed envelopes.
Statistical analyses: A Group (control v. experimental) x Time (Initial x 1 month x 3 month)
x Condition (depressive disorder v. anxiety disorder) factorial ANOVA will be performed.
Post hoc tests may include Tukey and/or Scheffe analyses. Qualitative analysis of responses
to adherence questions will be undertaken using a thematic analysis.
References
Asch, R., Price, J., & Hawks, G. (1991). Psychiatric outpatients' reactions to summary
letters of their consultation. British Journal of Medical Psychology, 64, 3 - 9.
Atthobari, J., Monster, T. B., & de Jong-ven den Berg, L. T. (2004). The effect of
hypertension and hypercholesterolemia screening with subsequent intervention letter on the
use of blood pressure and lipid lowering drugs. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology,
57, 328 - 336.
Dale, J., Tadros, G., Adams, S., & Deshpande, N. (2004). Do patients really want copies of
their GP letters? A questionnaire survey of older adults and their carers. Psychiatric
Bulletin, 28, 199 - 200.
Harris, C. & Boaden, R. (2003). Copying letters to patients: Summaries of 12 pilot project
sites. England Department of Health. Available:
Jelley, D., van Zwanenberg, T., & Walker, C. (2002). Copying letters to patients: Concerns
of clinicians and patients need to be addressed first. British Medical Journal, 325, 1359.
Marzanski, M., Musunuri, P., & Coupe, T. (2005). Copying letters to patients: A study of
patients' views. Psychiatric Bulletin, 29, 56 - 58.
McDowell, I., Newell, C., & Rosser, W. (1989a). Computerised reminders to encourage cervical
screening in family practice. Journal of Family Practice, 28, 420 - 424.
McDowell, I., Newell, C., & Rosser, W. (1989b). A randomised trial of computerised reminders
for blood pressure screening in primary care. Medical Care, 27, 297 - 305.
Nandhra, H., Murray, G., Hymas, N., & Hunt, N. (2004). Medical records: Doctors' and
patients' experiences of copying letters to patients. Psychiatric Bulletin, 28, 40 - 42.
Saywell, R. M., Champion, V. L., Zollinger, T. W., Maraj, M., Skinner, C. S., Zoppi, K. A.,
& Meugge, C. M. (2003). The cost effectiveness of 5 interventions to increase mammography
adherence in a managed care population. American Journal of Managed Care, 9, 33 - 44.
Somerville, M.A. (1994). Labels versus contents: Variance between philosophy, psychiatry and
law in concepts governing decision-making. McGill Law Journal, 39, 179 - 199.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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