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Predicting and preventing relapse of depression in primary care: a mixed methods study

Moriarty, Andrew Stephen

Authors

Andrew Stephen Moriarty



Contributors

Dean McMillan
Supervisor

Carolyn Chew-Graham
Supervisor

Simon Gilbody
Supervisor

Abstract

Background
Most people with depression are managed in primary care. Relapse (reemergence of depression symptoms after improvement) is common and contributes to the burden and morbidity associated with depression. There is a lack of evidence-based approaches for risk-stratifying people according to risk of relapse and for preventing relapse in primary care.
Methods
In this mixed methods study, I initially reviewed studies looking to predict relapse of depression across all settings. I then attempted to derive and validate a prognostic model to predict relapse within 6-8 months in a primary care setting, using multilevel logistic regression analysis on individual participant data from seven studies (n=1244). Concurrently, a qualitative workstream, using thematic analysis, explored the perspectives of general practitioners (GPs) and people with lived experience of depression around relapse risk and prevention in practice.
Results
The systematic review identified eleven models; none could currently be implemented in a primary care setting. The prognostic model developed in this study had inadequate predictive performance on internal validation (Cstatistic 0.60; calibration slope 0.81). I carried out twenty-two semi-structured interviews with GPs and twenty-three with people with lived experience of depression. People with lived experience of depression and GPs reflected that a discussion around relapse would be useful but was not routinely offered. Both participant groups felt there would be benefits to relapse prevention for depression being embedded within primary care.
Conclusions
We are currently unable to accurately predict an individual’s risk of
depression relapse. The longer-term care of people with depression in
general practice could be improved by enabling continuity of care, increased consistency and clarity around follow-up arrangements, and focussed discussions around relapse risk and prevention. Scalable, brief relapse prevention interventions are needed, which would require policy change and additional resource. We need to better understand existing interventions and barriers to implementation in practice.

Citation

Moriarty, A. S. Predicting and preventing relapse of depression in primary care: a mixed methods study. (Thesis). Hull York Medical School. https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4483741

Thesis Type Thesis
Deposit Date Dec 15, 2023
Publicly Available Date Dec 15, 2023
Keywords Medicine
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4483741
Additional Information Hull York Medical School
University of Hull and University of York
Award Date Sep 1, 2023

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Copyright Statement
© 2023 Andrew Stephen Moriarty. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder.





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