eHealth-supported case management for patients with panic disorder or depression in primary care: Study protocol for a cRCT (PREMA)

Standard

eHealth-supported case management for patients with panic disorder or depression in primary care: Study protocol for a cRCT (PREMA). / Lukaschek, Karoline; Mergenthal, Karola; Heider, Dirk; Hanke, Alexander; Munski, Kathrein; Moschner, Anne; Emig, Michelle; van den Akker, Marjan; Zapf, Antonia; Wegscheider, Karl; König, Hans-Helmut; Gensichen, Jochen; PREMA-study group.

in: TRIALS, Jahrgang 20, Nr. 1, 02.12.2019, S. 662.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Lukaschek, K, Mergenthal, K, Heider, D, Hanke, A, Munski, K, Moschner, A, Emig, M, van den Akker, M, Zapf, A, Wegscheider, K, König, H-H, Gensichen, J & PREMA-study group 2019, 'eHealth-supported case management for patients with panic disorder or depression in primary care: Study protocol for a cRCT (PREMA)', TRIALS, Jg. 20, Nr. 1, S. 662. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3751-3

APA

Lukaschek, K., Mergenthal, K., Heider, D., Hanke, A., Munski, K., Moschner, A., Emig, M., van den Akker, M., Zapf, A., Wegscheider, K., König, H-H., Gensichen, J., & PREMA-study group (2019). eHealth-supported case management for patients with panic disorder or depression in primary care: Study protocol for a cRCT (PREMA). TRIALS, 20(1), 662. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3751-3

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{77fa931f1e804e43b9bb472d3b730052,
title = "eHealth-supported case management for patients with panic disorder or depression in primary care: Study protocol for a cRCT (PREMA)",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Panic disorder (PD), frequently occurring with agoraphobia (AG), and depression are common mental disorders in primary care and associated with considerable individual and societal costs. Early detection and effective treatment of depression and PD/AG are of major importance. Cognitive behavioural exposure exercises have been shown to be effective in reducing anxiety and depressive symptoms. Practice team-based case management can improve clinical outcomes for patients with chronic diseases in primary care. The present study aims at evaluating the effects and cost-effectiveness of a primary care team-based intervention using behavioural therapy elements and case management supported by eHealth components in patients with PD/AG or depression compared to treatment as usual.METHODS/DESIGN: This is a two-arm cluster-randomized, controlled trial (cRCT). General practices represent the units of randomisation. General practitioners recruit adult patients with depression and PD ± AG according to the International Classification of Diseases, version 10 (ICD-10). In the intervention group, patients receive cognitive behaviour therapy-oriented psychoeducation and instructions to self-managed exposure exercises in four manual-based appointments with the general practitioner. A trained health care assistant from the practice team delivers case management and is continuously monitoring symptoms and treatment progress in ten protocol-based telephone contacts with patients. Practice teams and patients are supported by eHealth components. In the control group, patients receive usual care from general practitioners. Outcomes are measured at baseline (T0), at follow-up after 6 months (T1), and at follow-up after 12 months (T2). The primary outcome is the mental health status of patients as measured by the Mental Health Index (MHI-5). Effect sizes of 0.2 standard deviation (SD) are regarded as relevant. Assuming a drop-out rate of 20% of practices and patients each, we aim at recruiting 1844 patients in 148 primary care practices. This corresponds to 12.5 patients on average per primary care practice. Secondary outcomes include depression and anxiety-related clinical parameters and health-economic costs.DISCUSSION: If the intervention is more effective than treatment as usual, the three-component (cognitive behaviour therapy, case-management, eHealth) primary care-based intervention for patients suffering from PD/AG or depression could be a valuable low-threshold option that benefits patients and primary care practice teams.TRIAL REGISTRATION: German clinical trials register, DRKS00016622. Registered on February 22nd, 2019.",
author = "Karoline Lukaschek and Karola Mergenthal and Dirk Heider and Alexander Hanke and Kathrein Munski and Anne Moschner and Michelle Emig and {van den Akker}, Marjan and Antonia Zapf and Karl Wegscheider and Hans-Helmut K{\"o}nig and Jochen Gensichen and {PREMA-study group}",
year = "2019",
month = dec,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1186/s13063-019-3751-3",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "662",
journal = "TRIALS",
issn = "1745-6215",
publisher = "Current Controlled Trials Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - eHealth-supported case management for patients with panic disorder or depression in primary care: Study protocol for a cRCT (PREMA)

AU - Lukaschek, Karoline

AU - Mergenthal, Karola

AU - Heider, Dirk

AU - Hanke, Alexander

AU - Munski, Kathrein

AU - Moschner, Anne

AU - Emig, Michelle

AU - van den Akker, Marjan

AU - Zapf, Antonia

AU - Wegscheider, Karl

AU - König, Hans-Helmut

AU - Gensichen, Jochen

AU - PREMA-study group

PY - 2019/12/2

Y1 - 2019/12/2

N2 - BACKGROUND: Panic disorder (PD), frequently occurring with agoraphobia (AG), and depression are common mental disorders in primary care and associated with considerable individual and societal costs. Early detection and effective treatment of depression and PD/AG are of major importance. Cognitive behavioural exposure exercises have been shown to be effective in reducing anxiety and depressive symptoms. Practice team-based case management can improve clinical outcomes for patients with chronic diseases in primary care. The present study aims at evaluating the effects and cost-effectiveness of a primary care team-based intervention using behavioural therapy elements and case management supported by eHealth components in patients with PD/AG or depression compared to treatment as usual.METHODS/DESIGN: This is a two-arm cluster-randomized, controlled trial (cRCT). General practices represent the units of randomisation. General practitioners recruit adult patients with depression and PD ± AG according to the International Classification of Diseases, version 10 (ICD-10). In the intervention group, patients receive cognitive behaviour therapy-oriented psychoeducation and instructions to self-managed exposure exercises in four manual-based appointments with the general practitioner. A trained health care assistant from the practice team delivers case management and is continuously monitoring symptoms and treatment progress in ten protocol-based telephone contacts with patients. Practice teams and patients are supported by eHealth components. In the control group, patients receive usual care from general practitioners. Outcomes are measured at baseline (T0), at follow-up after 6 months (T1), and at follow-up after 12 months (T2). The primary outcome is the mental health status of patients as measured by the Mental Health Index (MHI-5). Effect sizes of 0.2 standard deviation (SD) are regarded as relevant. Assuming a drop-out rate of 20% of practices and patients each, we aim at recruiting 1844 patients in 148 primary care practices. This corresponds to 12.5 patients on average per primary care practice. Secondary outcomes include depression and anxiety-related clinical parameters and health-economic costs.DISCUSSION: If the intervention is more effective than treatment as usual, the three-component (cognitive behaviour therapy, case-management, eHealth) primary care-based intervention for patients suffering from PD/AG or depression could be a valuable low-threshold option that benefits patients and primary care practice teams.TRIAL REGISTRATION: German clinical trials register, DRKS00016622. Registered on February 22nd, 2019.

AB - BACKGROUND: Panic disorder (PD), frequently occurring with agoraphobia (AG), and depression are common mental disorders in primary care and associated with considerable individual and societal costs. Early detection and effective treatment of depression and PD/AG are of major importance. Cognitive behavioural exposure exercises have been shown to be effective in reducing anxiety and depressive symptoms. Practice team-based case management can improve clinical outcomes for patients with chronic diseases in primary care. The present study aims at evaluating the effects and cost-effectiveness of a primary care team-based intervention using behavioural therapy elements and case management supported by eHealth components in patients with PD/AG or depression compared to treatment as usual.METHODS/DESIGN: This is a two-arm cluster-randomized, controlled trial (cRCT). General practices represent the units of randomisation. General practitioners recruit adult patients with depression and PD ± AG according to the International Classification of Diseases, version 10 (ICD-10). In the intervention group, patients receive cognitive behaviour therapy-oriented psychoeducation and instructions to self-managed exposure exercises in four manual-based appointments with the general practitioner. A trained health care assistant from the practice team delivers case management and is continuously monitoring symptoms and treatment progress in ten protocol-based telephone contacts with patients. Practice teams and patients are supported by eHealth components. In the control group, patients receive usual care from general practitioners. Outcomes are measured at baseline (T0), at follow-up after 6 months (T1), and at follow-up after 12 months (T2). The primary outcome is the mental health status of patients as measured by the Mental Health Index (MHI-5). Effect sizes of 0.2 standard deviation (SD) are regarded as relevant. Assuming a drop-out rate of 20% of practices and patients each, we aim at recruiting 1844 patients in 148 primary care practices. This corresponds to 12.5 patients on average per primary care practice. Secondary outcomes include depression and anxiety-related clinical parameters and health-economic costs.DISCUSSION: If the intervention is more effective than treatment as usual, the three-component (cognitive behaviour therapy, case-management, eHealth) primary care-based intervention for patients suffering from PD/AG or depression could be a valuable low-threshold option that benefits patients and primary care practice teams.TRIAL REGISTRATION: German clinical trials register, DRKS00016622. Registered on February 22nd, 2019.

U2 - 10.1186/s13063-019-3751-3

DO - 10.1186/s13063-019-3751-3

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 31791389

VL - 20

SP - 662

JO - TRIALS

JF - TRIALS

SN - 1745-6215

IS - 1

ER -