The effect of improving primary care depression management on employee absenteeism and productivity: A randomized trial

02/25/05

Permalink 03:49:21 am, by damageva Email , 254 words, 126 views   English (US)
Categories: Health

The effect of improving primary care depression management on employee absenteeism and productivity: A randomized trial

Objective: To test whether an intervention to improve primary care depression management significantly improves productivity at work and absenteeism over 2 years. Setting and Subjects: Twelve community primary care practices recruiting depressed primary care patients identified in a previsit screening. Research Design: Practices were stratified by depression treatment patterns before randomization to enhanced or usual care. After delivering brief training, enhanced care clinicians provided improved depression management over 24 months. The research team evaluated productivity and absenteeism at baseline, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months in 326 patients who reported full-or part-time work at one or more completed waves. Results: Employed patients in the enhanced care condition reported 6.1% greater productivity and 22.8% less absenteeism over 2 years. Consistent with its impact on depression severity and emotional role functioning, intervention effects were more observable in consistently employed subjects where the intervention improved productivity by 8.2% over 2 years at an estimated annual value of $1982 per depressed full-time equivalent and reduced absenteeism by 28.4% or 12.3 days over 2 years at an estimated annual value of $619 per depressed full-time equivalent. Conclusions: This trial, which is the first to our knowledge to demonstrate that improving the quality of care for any chronic disease has positive consequences for productivity and absenteeism, encourages formal cost-benefit research to assess the potential return-on-investment employers of stable workforces can realize from using their purchasing power to encourage better depression treatment for their employees.

Kathryn Rost, Jeffrey L Smith, and Miriam Dickinson
Medical Care via Proquest
Dec 2004.Vol.42, Iss. 12; pg. 1202
http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=793212931&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=13371&RQT=309&VName=PQD

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