Title: Lessons Learned from Using Depression Screening Measures
1Lessons Learned from Using Depression Screening
Measures
- Nancy L. Wilson, LCSW
- Department of Medicine-Geriatrics
- Huffington Center on Aging
- Houston Center for Quality Care Utilization
Studies - Baylor College of Medicine
- Care for Elders
- Houston, TX
2Ties not Roots not Missouri experts
- East St. Louis Kentucky farm refugees
- Cape Girardeau TV mecca
- St. Louis Cardinals (Remember 1964 !)
- Washington University consumer
- St. Louis University Alixe a graduate
- Recently Transformation Believer--
- Lots to learn..
3HEALTHY IDEAS
Identifying Depression Empowering Activities
for Seniors
4Accomplished through Partnerships
- Program Leadership Care for Elders and Baylor
- 80 member Houston-based partnership committed to
creating solutions to increase access to
services, improve quality and enhance life for
older adults and caregivers - www.careforelders.org
- Funders John A. Hartford Foundation,
Administration on Aging, Robert Wood Johnson,
SAMHSA - Policy Leadership AoA , National Council on
Aging - Academic Expertise Baylor College of Medicine
and Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical
Center - Community Aging and Mental Health Providers
- Elders and family caregivers
5 Alixe McNeill, MPAVice President, Program
Development Mental Health Lead / Center for
Healthy Agingalixe.mcneill_at_ncoa.org
- Chair, National Coalition on Mental Health
Aging
6National Council on Aging
- NCOAs Mission
- To improve the lives of older Americans.
- Who We Are
- NCOA is a non-profit service and advocacy
organization based in Washington, DC. - Visit www.ncoa.org
NCOA Core Values Social and Economic
Justice Respect and Caring Innovation Integrity
and Excellence
7National Council on Aging
- What We Do
- NCOA is a national voice for older adults
especially those who are vulnerable and
disadvantaged -- and the community organizations
that serve them. - NCOA brings together non-profit organizations,
businesses and government to develop creative
solutions that improve the lives of all older
adults. - NCOA works with thousands of organizations across
the country to help seniors live independently,
find jobs and benefits, improve their health,
live independently and remain active in their
communities.
8Todays Presentation
- Late-Life Depression
- Rationale for Community Action
- Origins and Key components of Healthy IDEAS
- Process of Implementation Funding ,
Partnerships, Steps - Training and Technical Assistance
- Views from Stakeholders
9Symptoms of Depression (DSM IV)
- Symptoms persist for two weeks or longer
- Depressed mood or an inability to enjoy life
- Any four of the following seven criteria must be
present - Change in sleep
- Change in eating habits
- Low energy or fatigue
- Feeling of worthless or excessive guilty
- Restlessness or slowed-down movements
- Diminished ability to concentrate or think
- Thoughts of death or suicide
10Depression in Late Life
- Depression is a recurring, chronic illness.
- Older adults are often under-recognized
Under-diagnosed older adults underreport and
present somatically. - Co-exists with other mental or physical
illnesses, including dementia and drinking. - Cultural diversity can affect the presentation of
depression.
11Depression is Common, Costly, Disabling, and
Deadly
- Depression affects 15-20Â of older adults
- Depression is Disabling
- 2 cause of disability (WHO)
- Impact on Self-Care ADLs and IADLs
- Deadly and Reduced Quality of Life
- Suicide Elderly at greatest risk
- Co-morbid illnesses Affected Diabetes, Heart
Disease - Costly
- Expensive (50-100 higher health care costs)
- Increased Morbidity, Mortality, Non-adherence,
recovery
12- PUBLIC HEALTH
- Increase awareness / reduce stigma
- Eliminate health disparities
- Improve access to services
- http//www.cdc.gov/aging/
13Setting Priorities for Older Adults
- Improving Access
- Integration of Mental Health and General Health
Care - Home and Community-based Services
- Improving Quality
- Evidence-based Practice Implementation
- Trained Healthcare Workforce with Expertise in
Geriatrics
14Depression
- Major depression is second only to heart disease
in the magnitude of disease burden.. - Mental Health Report of the Surgeon General
- Loneliness, isolation, limited resources and
physical disabilities increase the risk of
depression in older adults. - Substance Abuse and Mental Health Among Older
Americans The State of the Knowledge and Future
Directions
15Community agencies reach high-risk, underserved
older adults
PRIOR HISTORY
ILLNESS/ DISABILITY
FEMALE
FAMILY HISTORY
RISK FACTORS
SOCIAL ISOLATION
LOSS
FINANCIAL STRAIN
IMMIGRANTS
16What we Know
- Health Disparities are significant
- Proactive Identification of depression is
critical but not sufficient. - Effective methods to identify, evaluate, treat
depression and improve quality of life are
available. - Strong evidence depression care management and
cognitive behavioral therapy approaches.
17Barriers to Addressing Depression in Older Adults
- Client Barriers
- Stigma Im not crazy! Im not a weak person
- Lack of knowledge- Its just my diabetes or
being old What will this pill do? - Provider Barriers
- Lack of knowledge and skills
- Primary Care faces many competing demands
- Scarcity of mental health professionals
- System Barriers
- How can we get care to the person or the person
to care? - Financing of services is limited and in silos
18Client Barriers Labels and Stigma
19Why address depression within community agencies?
- Reaching high-risk population
- Established rapport-cultural and linguistic
competence - Often already asking information on medication,
health-co-occurring issues - Existing focus on well-being and linkages with
medical and community resources
20What is Healthy IDEAS?
Healthy IDEAS (Identifying Depression, Empowering
Activities for Seniors)
- An evidence-based community depression program
designed to detect and reduce the severity of
depressive symptoms in older adults with chronic
health conditions and functional limitations
through existing community based case management
services.
21Program Goals
- Identify and address depression in older adults.
- Reach the intended population of frail, high-risk
elders, who are often overlooked and
under-treated. - Train agency staff to provide and deliver an
evidence-based depression intervention. - Improve the linkage between community aging
service providers and health care professionals
through appropriate referrals, better
communication effective partnerships. - Prevent recurrence of depression through regular
ongoing depression screening.
22Evidence-based Programs
- Outcome focused
- Track social, mental, physical functional
changes using objective self reported measures - Answers the question Can we do what is known to
work? - Monitors fidelity
- Moves science to service
23Anatomy of Evidence-based Programs
- Has a specific target population
- Has specific, measurable goal(s)
- Has a stated reasoning behind it and proven
benefits - Has an organized, well-defined program structure
and timeframe - Specifies staffing needs/skills
- Specifies tools and resources
- Builds in program evaluation to measure program
quality and health outcomes
24Healthy IDEAS is an Evidence-based
Program
- Science to Service
- Used an approach translated from specific
scientific random controlled positive research. - Combines evidence-based components from other
depression interventions including these major
depression studies - PEARLS AND IMPACT
- Retains the key elements of the programs to
ensure known evidence-based ingredients remain
(Fidelity).
25Evidence for Depression Care Management
- IMPACT (Improving Mood-Promoting Access to
Collaborative Treatment). Unützer, J., Katon,
W., Callahan, C.M., and J.W. Williams, Jr., et
al. (2002). Collaborative care management of
late-life depression in the primary care setting
A randomized controlled trial. JAMA
288(22)2836-2845. - PEARLS (Program to Encourage Active, Rewarding
Lives for Seniors). Ciechanowski, P., Wagner,
E., Schmaling, K., Schwarz, S., Williams, B.,
Diehr, P., Kulzer, J., Gray, S., Collier, C., and
LoGerfo, J. (2004) 291(13)1569-77.
Community-integrated home-based depression
treatment in the elderly A randomized controlled
trial. Journal of the American Medical
Association 291(13)1569-77.
26Evidence for Healthy IDEAS Components
- IMPACT AND PEARLS offered the care management
road map and evidence for in-home approach - Evidence indicates that home-based mental health
treatment for older adults is effective in
improving psychiatric symptoms (Van Citters
Bartels, S , 2004) - Screening and Assessment Early recognition of
depression facilitates treatment and can be done
by non-professionals using valid tools. (Whooley
et al. 1997, Sheikh Yesavage, 1986, Williams et
al. 2002.) -
- Education, Linkage, and Self-management Support
(Unützer et al.,2002 and Hunkeler et al., 2000.) - Behavioral Activation Helping clients
activate to increase behaviors that fit with
life goals and produce rewards will help decrease
depressive symptoms. (Hopko et al.,2003,,
Jacobson et al., 2000.)
27Target Population
- Underserved Populations
- Ethnically diverse and socio-economically diverse
populations of older adults who are at high risk
for depressive symptoms and living in the
community. - Inclusion Criteria
- 60
- Currently enrolled in a care or case
management program - Cognitive ability to participate
- Able to communicate verbally
28Program Design
- Embedded in case management programs.
- Case managers visit clients in their home and do
telephone follow-up as well in the community
individually over a 3-6 month period. - A manual outlines the steps and includes written
worksheets, client handouts, and forms to support
and document the steps and client outcomes. (
SEE Guide Handout) - Community partnership approach for training,
evaluation fidelity. - Partner with health mental health care
providers to facilitate referral.
29Core Program Components
- Screening for symptoms of depression assessing
severity - Two-question screen standardized assessment
- 15 item Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) or PHQ-9
- Educating older adults family caregivers about
depression effective treatment including
self-care medication. - Referral, linkage follow-up for older adults
with untreated depression to health or mental
health providers. - Behavioral Activation (BA) empowering older
adults to manage their depressive symptoms by
engaging in meaningful, positive activities.
30Behavioral Model of Depression
Depression results in behaviors that limit
positive outcomes ? reduced pleasure, reduced
accomplishment
Lowered Mood
Decreased Activity
Decreased Pleasant Activities
31Behavioral Activation
- Improve mood by
- Increasing frequency of behaviors that lead to
positive outcomes - Doing activities that feel good or are
pleasurable or reduce stress (may involve a task,
something social or an activity)
     Â
Rewarding Activities
Â
 Decreased Depressive Symptoms
 Improved Mood
    .
32Evaluation Design
- Pre-post impact evaluation data collected.
- Measures were embedded into agency assessment
care plan review forms. - Data collection occurs according to the routine
timeline for case management Baseline, 3 months,
6 months, and for some clients 9 months
assessment. - Outcomes address
- Depression, pain, social function, social and
physical activity levels, education/knowledge,
service use - Measured client satisfaction via telephone
interviews.
33Client Demographic Profile
p.05, p01, p.001, p.0001
34Delivery Experience and Outcomes
- Older adults vary in their readiness to address
depression - Most elders prefer treatment through primary
care others accept mental health services - Increased participation in BA associated with
better outcomes - Medication Use is common, yet not always
effective
35Client Impact
- Reduction in depression severity
- Reduction of self-reported pain
- Increased knowledge of how to get help for
depression. - Increased level of activity
- knowledge of how to manage
depressive symptoms.
36GDS Outcomes (15 item scale)
Scores at 3 and 6 months differ from baseline at
p lt .0001
37Clients Reporting Pain
Scores comparing Baseline to 6 months differ at p
lt .005
38Agency Impact
- Staff are trained to deliver an evidence-based
intervention - Adds credibility to the work
- Case management services are expanded to include
mental health - OK to talk about take action
on Depression - I was surprised that my clients
were not
only willing to talk about their
mood but chose to
do something. - What seemed like a small step to me
helped my
client feel successful -
39Community Impact
- Reached under-served populations
- low-income, physically frail, ethnic and
racial minorities - Improved linkage between community aging service
providers and health /mental health professionals
- Fostered community academic partnerships
- Helped prevent recurrence of depression
40Miss Grace
- 68 year old single woman, lives with her brother
who has Alzheimers disease. - Initial geriatric depression score 8/15
- Client encouraged to do something she enjoys -
both client her brother were professional
artists. - First step spend 30 minutes 1X a week sketching.
- Goal increase the time she spent painting
- She now paints or draws almost daily. Her brother
has also begun drawing again - Follow-up GDS at 90 days 6/15
41Common Worries in the Beginning
- How do I Its hard to go from meals to mood?
- How will I ever find the time to do this and
everything else? - What if my client doesnt want to talk about
this?? OR - Wants to talk too much??
42Where is Healthy IDEAS? 50 Sites
- States
- Arizona
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Iowa
- Maine
- Maryland
- Michigan
- New Jersey
- Ohio
- Texas
- Vermont
- Organizations
- Area Agency on Aging case management programs
- Local non-profit social service agencies
- Behavioral health provider agencies
- Caregiver support programs
43Maine Experience
- Lead Elder Independence of Maine
- - an Area Agency on Aging and home care
coordination agency - Statewide rural and urban
- Funding OAA Medicaid HCBS Waiver
- Case Managers BAs, LSWs, RNs
- Clients Caucasian, education high school or
less, low-income
44Fort Worth, Texas Experience
- Lead Area Agency on Aging of Tarrant County and
United Way - Urban County
- Collaborative Model with agencies linked -
Catholic Charities, Meals on Wheels, Senior
Service, Mental Health Association - Funding OAA built into agency financing
- Case Managers BAs, LSWs
- Clients African Amer. Hispanic, Caucasian
45Ohio Experience
- Lead State Mental Health with Aging and
Substance Abuse - Statewide urban and rural
- Model Older Ohioans Behavioral Health Network
leadership local AAAs and county MH partners - Funding SAMHSA MH Transformation Funds/
- mini grants to local AAA agencies
(Integrated CM for Medicaid and OAA funded
services ) - Case Managers BAs, LSWs, RNs
- Clients African Amer., Hispanic, Caucasian
46Other Experience
- Florida
- Local health foundation
- 3 lead agencies, 80 minority populations
- New Jersey
- State Aging OAA grants to Jewish Family Services,
Medicaid HCBS waiver, MSWs - Hawaii
- Lifespan Community family service provider to
Asian and minority populations, BAs,
47Lessons Learned
- Various lead and provider agencies
- Success in urban and rural areas
- Success with racially and ethnically diverse
groups many low-income - Variety in start-up funding
- Embed practice for sustainability
48Steps for Implementation
- Healthy IDEAS Readiness Assessment
- Leadership Team Partnership Development
- Staff Selection
- Program Installation
- Pre-Service and In-Service Training
- Consultation and Coaching
- Program Evaluation
491. Healthy IDEAS Readiness Assessment
- Online survey from NCOA and Healthy IDEAS
- Assesses agency capacity and willingness to
implement Healthy IDEAS by measuring key program
elements - Staffing
- Partnerships
- Case Management Practice
- Record Keeping and Reporting Systems
- Organizational Culture and Support
- Program Leadership
- Innovativeness
- Evidence-based Experience
50Readiness Report Grid
Graphic representation of a potential adopter
organizations readiness status in terms of each
critical element of an innovative program
512. Leadership Team Partnership Development
- Healthy IDEAS is an important process of
organizational change requiring leadership and
time of 2-6 months. - Leaders identify, mobilize and unite strengths of
expertise in aging and mental health services
within and outside lead agency - Establish partnerships for program collaboration
and referral
523. Staff Selection
- Leadership and Management
- With Champion(s)
- Trainer (s) and Coaches
- Clinical Consultant
- Case Managers / Frontline Providers
Supervisors
534. Program Installation
- Plan for embedding Healthy IDEAS into current
delivery system of case management (or other
service) - Establish policies and procedures for
implementation - Customize tools and forms
- Arrange for training and technical assistance
545. Pre-Service In-Service Training
- Initial education about depression
- Interactive training
- Ongoing coaching / supervision
556. Consultation and Coaching
- Goals
- 1. Support case managers in developing
confidence /skills to deliver program - 2. Assure adherence and competence to conduct
program - Ideally - Train clinically qualified agency
supervisors or program director - Observe, review records, confer, advise
- Supervisor evaluates case managers
567. Program Evaluation
- Collaborate in evaluation plan development
- Insure agency needs are met
- Use menu to select basic process outcome
measures to be collected - Embed data collection in routine forms, and
systems - Promote Continuous Quality Improvement
57Key Steps in Program Implementation
- Identifying Resources
- Building the Right Team
- Installing the Program
- Training and Coaching
- Evaluation for Continuous Quality Improvement and
Monitoring Fidelity
58 Implementation Process Activities and
Resources
- Agencies or Community Partnerships need
- Dedicated program leadership Champion,
Supervisors - Mental/Behavioral Health Expertise for
Training/Coaching - Effective Linkage Communication systems with
Treatment Providers - Practitioners with capacity/ability to
incorporate components into their existing case
management routine with older adults/caregivers - System for collecting and monitoring depression
and other relevant outcome data
59Healthy IDEAS Replication
- Tools for assessing organizational readiness
- Plan includes approach and tools for each core
component - Technical Assistance via telephone consultation
as your team develops local plans
60Training tools and resources that process
evaluation lessons from early adopters Agency and
Intervention Manuals role descriptions, fidelity
tools
61Once Program Installation Tasks are Complete
- Training
- Depression 101 from local professional (s)
- National Intervention Team Training
- Involves local leaders and coaches
- Conducted over two days 5.5. to 6 hours
- Based on established curriculum using
training DVD
62What does Implementation Look like ?
- Key Agency Readiness TasksCollaboration with
community mental health experts to assist with - Training of care managers and supervisors
- Linkages to evaluation and treatment resources
- Organizational Staff Readiness for Change
- Internal advocate/cheerleader
- Training and Follow-up Coaching and Supervision
63Challenges
- Stigma among clients and providers
- Reluctance to change Clients and staff both
have to learn new behaviors - Resources - Affordable mental health diagnostic
or treatment services - Time required for the intervention in the face
of competing demands - Commitment at the agency level to addressing
depression and supporting a change process.
64What might you expect?
- 15-40 of clients are positive for depressive
symptoms - 15-35 are taking an antidepressant already-
- Clients embrace self-care tasks to varying
degrees-not all will set behavior change goals
initially, some never
65Healthy IDEAS Tries to..
- Build knowledge and awareness of depressive
symptoms - Enhance motivation to take action
- Teach and support skill use in daily life
- Increase opportunities and resources for
successful skill use to achieve better outcomes.
66For More Information
- Quijano, L.M., Stanley, M.A., Petersen, N.J.,
Casado, B.L., Steinberg, E.H., Cully, J.A.,
Wilson, N.L. Healthy IDEAS A depression
intervention delivered by community-based case
managers serving older adults. (2007) Journal of
Applied Gerontology 26139-156. - Casado, B. L., Quijano, L.M., Stanley, M.A.,
Cully, J.A., Steinberg, E.H., Wilson, N.L Healthy
IDEAS Implementation of A Depression Program
Through Community-Based Case Management. (in
press) The Gerontologist. - Replication report NCOA-Center for Healthy Aging
website http//www.healthyagingprograms.org - Care for Elders www.careforelders.org/healthyide
as
67- What Do Key Stakeholders Say About Healthy
IDEAS?
68Administrators Say
- We see depression with isolated people.
Depression is part of the problem stopping
healthy behavior. If we want to help people
remain in their own homes with high quality of
life, we need to address depression and make this
part of our services. - Since we have ongoing training for case managers,
we could integrate depression care into the
broader program - it would be great to do this.
- Before we started Healthy IDEAS, we did not have
the tools to work with clients on depression, now
we have a concrete program that we can use to
truly assist clients.
69Funders
- AoA supports Healthy IDEAS in its Evidence-Based
Disease and Disability Prevention Program - SAMHSA gave Healthy IDEAS a Science Service
Award - Federal, state foundation funders set goals
- Within 10 years, national reach will be achieved
with effective community depression care programs
like Healthy IDEAS and PEARLS. - Programs will be high quality, have fidelity and
be implemented in sustainable ways through strong
and effective partnerships.
70Case Managers Say
- One-third of my caseload shows symptoms of
depression, it is an important issue to address.
- It was hard to add one more thingbut seeing
our clients respond ...this is worthwhilewe are
actually empowering them. - With Healthy IDEAS case managers are now able to
offer resources that assist our clients in
self-management of depressive symptoms. This
allows us to better serve our clients. - I have seen big changes with clients
participating in Healthy IDEAS including
increased mobility.
71Clients Say
- With the information I have now, I am better
able to manage my health. - I enjoyed doing activities that made my day seem
better. - I understand how my activity affects my mood
now. When I am feeling sad, I go for a walk or
go out to the local grocery store and I just feel
better.
72Taking Action Individual or Agency
- Take a few minutes to identify what one thing you
can undertake to - Improve depression care for elders in your
community - Maintain a positive, healthy mood in your own life
73How can your agency explore addressing
depression?
- Examine how other communities in state or nation
are addressing depression - Compile data about current depressive symptoms,
unmet needs in current clients - Conduct dialogue with key partners outside your
agency (aging, health, mh) - Consider how to mobilize existing funds or
donated resources to do a program