242 results on '"Katz IR"'
Search Results
2. Reducing suicidal ideation and depression in older primary care patients: 24-month outcomes of the PROSPECT study.
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Alexopoulos GS, Reynolds CF 3rd, Bruce ML, Katz IR, Raue PJ, Mulsant BH, Oslin DW, Ten Have T, PROSPECT Group, Alexopoulos, George S, Reynolds, Charles F 3rd, Bruce, Martha L, Katz, Ira R, Raue, Patrick J, Mulsant, Benoit H, Oslin, David W, and Ten Have, Thomas
- Abstract
Objective: The Prevention of Suicide in Primary Care Elderly: Collaborative Trial (PROSPECT) evaluated the impact of a care management intervention on suicidal ideation and depression in older primary care patients. This is the first report of outcomes over a 2-year period.Method: Study participants were patients 60 years of age or older (N=599) with major or minor depression selected after screening 9,072 randomly identified patients of 20 primary care practices randomly assigned to provide either the PROSPECT intervention or usual care. The intervention consisted of services of 15 trained care managers, who offered algorithm-based recommendations to physicians and helped patients with treatment adherence over 24 months.Results: Compared with patients receiving usual care, those receiving the intervention had a higher likelihood of receiving antidepressants and/or psychotherapy (84.9%-89% versus 49%-62%) and had a 2.2 times greater decline in suicidal ideation over 24 months. Treatment response occurred earlier on average in the intervention group and increased from months 18 to 24, while no appreciable increase in treatment response occurred in the usual care group during the same period. Among patients with major depression, a greater number achieved remission in the intervention group than in the usual-care group at 4 months (26.6% versus 15.2%), 8 months (36% versus 22.5%), and 24 months (45.4% versus 31.5%). Patients with minor depression had favorable outcomes regardless of treatment assignment.Conclusions: Sustained collaborative care maintains high utilization of depression treatment, reduces suicidal ideation, and improves the outcomes of major depression over 2 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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3. Dimensions of executive function in Parkinson's disease.
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Weintraub D, Moberg PJ, Culbertson WC, Duda JE, Katz IR, and Stern MB
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BACKGROUND: Executive impairment is common in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, it is unknown which dimensions of executive function are assessed by commonly used neuropsychological instruments and if clinical correlates of specific dimensions exist. METHOD: A convenience sample of 46 PD patients was evaluated with three executive function tests: the Tower of London-Drexel, the Trail-Making Test and the Stroop Color-Word Test. Factor analysis was used to probe for dimensions of executive control, and linear regression models were used to explore the association between the generated factors and other clinical features. RESULTS: Factor analysis revealed two executive factors, one related to planning (eigenvalue=4.2) and the other to inhibitory control (eigenvalue=1.8), together accounting for 75% of the variance in scores. In linear regression models, poorer planning was associated with increasing severity of apathy (t=2.11, p=0.041), and diminished inhibitory control was associated with increasing severity of parkinsonism (t=2.78, p=0.008) and lower educational level (t=-2.23, p=0.032). Conclusions: Planning deficits and diminished inhibitory control are two dimensions of executive impairment in PD, the former associated with decreased motivation and the latter with increased motor slowing. Similar performance on both executive and non-executive components of these instruments suggests that results of executive testing in PD may be confounded by non-executive deficits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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4. Clinical application of operationalized criteria for 'Depression of Alzheimer's Disease'.
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Rosenberg PB, Onyike CU, Katz IR, Porsteinsson AP, Mintzer JE, Schneider LS, Rabins PV, Meinert CL, Martin BK, Lyketsos CG, and Depression of Alzheimer's Disease Study-2
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OBJECTIVES: 'Depression of Alzheimer's Disease' (dAD) is a common complication of Alzheimer's disease and is increasingly recognized as a syndrome with a clinical presentation differing from major depression. Criteria for the diagnosis of dAD have been proposed previously. METHODS: This paper presents these criteria in operationalized format designed to be accessible for clinical use. Four cases are discussed that demonstrate the use of these criteria and illustrate important differences between dAD and major depression. RESULTS: The dAD criteria are broader than DSM-IV criteria for Major Depressive Episode and incorporate caregiver input. CONCLUSIONS: Given the differences between dAD and major depression diagnoses, it is important to assess the efficacy of treatments for dAD. Depression in Alzheimer's Disease-2 (DIADS-2) is a controlled trial of dAD treatments that will also assess the validity of these criteria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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5. Depression in older adults.
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Alexopoulos GS, Katz IR, Reynolds CF III, Ross RW, Alexopoulos, G S, Katz, I R, Reynolds, C F 3rd, and Ross, R W
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- 2001
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6. Pharmacotherapy of depression in older patients: a summary of the expert consensus guidelines.
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Alexopoulos GS, Katz IR, Reynolds CF III, Carpenter D, Docherty JP, Ross RW, Alexopoulos, G S, Katz, I R, Reynolds, C F 3rd, Carpenter, D, Docherty, J P, and Ross, R W
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- 2001
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7. Chronic depression in the elderly: approaches for prevention.
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Reynolds CF III, Alexopoulos GS, Katz IR, and Lebowitz BD
- Abstract
Depression in old age frequently follows a chronic and/or relapsing course, related to medical comorbidity, cognitive impairment and depletion of psychosocial resources. As endorsed by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) Consensus Development Conference on the Diagnosis and Treatment of Late Life Depression, a major goal of treatment is to prevent relapse, recurrence and chronicity. We believe that most, if not all, elderly patients with major depressive episodes are appropriate candidates for maintenance therapy, because of the vulnerability to relapse and recurrence and because of the favourable benefit to risk ratio of available treatments. Antidepressant pharmacotherapy is the mainstay of this therapeutic goal, but psychosocial approaches (especially interpersonal psychotherapy) have also been shown to contribute significantly to prevention of a chronic depressive illness and to prevention of the disability that attends depression. Studies published to date have established the long term or maintenance efficacy of the tricyclic antidepressant nortriptyline. Current, ongoing studies are addressing the maintenance efficacy of paroxetine and citalopram to prolong recovery in depression associated with old age. These studies are focusing particularly on patients aged 70 years and above, who are at high risk of recurrence, and on patients in primary care settings, where under-recognition and under-treatment of depression in the elderly have been costly from a public health perspective in terms of increased medical utilisation, burden to patients and families, and high rates of suicide. Depression in old age is a major contributor to the global burden of illness-related disability, but it is extremely treatable if appropriate pharmacotherapy is prescribed and accepted by patients and their caregivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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8. Choosing a nursing home: guide to resources on the Web.
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Katz LMG, Snellgrove MK, and Katz IR
- Abstract
Nursing homes provide two types of services: long term care for people with chronic disabling illnesses whose needs exceed the care that can be provided in the community, and rehabilitation or convalescent care for those recovering from an illness or injury. While the decision to enter a nursing home is a difficult one, it is important to remember that people in nursing homes can lead meaningful lives despite their diseases and disabilities. This article lists and describes numerous resources on the Web that can facilitate the process of selecting a nursing home. It also presents basic information about nursing homes and about the elements of the decision-making process so that an informed, personalized choice can be made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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9. Diagnosis and treatment of depression in late life. Consensus statement update.
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Lebowitz BD, Pearson JL, Schneider LS, Reynolds CF III, Alexopoulos GS, Bruce ML, Conwell Y, Katz IR, Meyers BS, Morrison MF, Mossey J, Niederehe G, Parmelee P, Lebowitz, B D, Pearson, J L, Schneider, L S, Reynolds, C F 3rd, Alexopoulos, G S, Bruce, M L, and Conwell, Y
- Abstract
Objective: To reexamine the conclusions of the 1991 National Institutes of Health Consensus Panel on Diagnosis and Treatment of Depression in Late Life in light of current scientific evidence.Participants: Participants included National Institutes of Health staff and experts drawn from the Planning Committee and presenters of the 1991 Consensus Development Conference.Evidence: Participants summarized relevant data from the world scientific literature on the original questions posed for the conference.Process: Participants reviewed the original consensus statement and identified areas for update. The list of issues was circulated to all participants and amended to reflect group agreement. Selected participants prepared first drafts of the consensus update for each issue. All drafts were read by all participants and were amended and edited to reflect group consensus.Conclusions: The review concluded that, although the initial consensus statement still holds, there is important new information in a number of areas. These areas include the onset and course of late-life depression; comorbidity and disability; sex and hormonal issues; newer medications, psychotherapies, and approaches to long-term treatment; impact of depression on health services and health care resource use; late-life depression as a risk factor for suicide; and the importance of the heterogeneous forms of depression. Depression in older people remains a significant public health problem. The burden of unrecognized or inadequately treated depression is substantial. Efficacious treatments are available. Aggressive approaches to recognition, diagnosis, and treatment are warranted to minimize suffering, improve overall functioning and quality of life, and limit inappropriate use of health care resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1997
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10. A stimulation-retreat special care unit for elders with dementing illness.
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Lawton MP, Van Haitsma K, Klapper J, Kleban MH, Katz IR, Corn J, Lawton, M P, Van Haitsma, K, Klapper, J, Kleban, M H, Katz, I R, and Corn, J
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- 1998
11. Interventions for treatment of depression in primary care.
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Coyne JC, Koppel J, Colenda CC, Bruce ML, Alexopoulos GS, Schulberg HC, Ten Have T, Katz IR, Reynolds CF III, and Coyne, James C
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- 2004
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12. The stability of thiamine hydrochloride and mono-nitrate in parenteral vitamin B complex and iron solutions
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Taub, Abraham, primary, Katz, Ir Ving, additional, and Katz, Martin, additional
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- 1949
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13. Mental health conditions among returning veterans.
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Katz IR
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- 2009
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14. Getting donepezil into the nursing home.
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Finucane TE, Tariot PN, Cummings JL, Katz IR, Mintzer J, Perdomo CA, Schwam EM, and Whalen E
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- 2003
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15. Donepezil for nursing home patients with dementia: a reinterpretation of the evidence.
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Steinman MA, Covinsky KE, Tariot PN, Cummings JL, Katz IR, Mintzer J, Perdomo CA, Schwam EM, and Whalen E
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- 2003
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16. Bench experiments comparing simulated inspiratory effort when breathing helium-oxygen mixtures to that during positive pressure support with air
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Martin Andrew R, Katz Ira M, Jenöfi Katharina, Caillibotte Georges, Brochard Laurent, and Texereau Joëlle
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Helium ,Oxygen ,Heliox ,Inspiratory effort ,Work of breathing ,Airway resistance ,Lung compliance ,Non-invasive ventilation ,Pressure support ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Background Inhalation of helium-oxygen (He/O2) mixtures has been explored as a means to lower the work of breathing of patients with obstructive lung disease. Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) with positive pressure support is also used for this purpose. The bench experiments presented herein were conducted in order to compare simulated patient inspiratory effort breathing He/O2 with that breathing medical air, with or without pressure support, across a range of adult, obstructive disease patterns. Methods Patient breathing was simulated using a dual-chamber mechanical test lung, with the breathing compartment connected to an ICU ventilator operated in NIV mode with medical air or He/O2 (78/22 or 65/35%). Parabolic or linear resistances were inserted at the inlet to the breathing chamber. Breathing chamber compliance was also varied. The inspiratory effort was assessed for the different gas mixtures, for three breathing patterns, with zero pressure support (simulating unassisted spontaneous breathing), and with varying levels of pressure support. Results Inspiratory effort increased with increasing resistance and decreasing compliance. At a fixed resistance and compliance, inspiratory effort increased with increasing minute ventilation, and decreased with increasing pressure support. For parabolic resistors, inspiratory effort was lower for He/O2 mixtures than for air, whereas little difference was measured for nominally linear resistance. Relatively small differences in inspiratory effort were measured between the two He/O2 mixtures. Used in combination, reductions in inspiratory effort provided by He/O2 and pressure support were additive. Conclusions The reduction in inspiratory effort afforded by breathing He/O2 is strongly dependent on the severity and type of airway obstruction. Varying helium concentration between 78% and 65% has small impact on inspiratory effort, while combining He/O2 with pressure support provides an additive reduction in inspiratory effort. In addition, breathing He/O2 alone may provide an alternative to pressure support in circumstances where NIV is not available or poorly tolerated.
- Published
- 2012
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17. Bench and mathematical modeling of the effects of breathing a helium/oxygen mixture on expiratory time constants in the presence of heterogeneous airway obstructions
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Martin Andrew R, Katz Ira M, Terzibachi Karine, Gouinaud Laure, Caillibotte Georges, and Texereau Joëlle
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Helium ,Heliox ,Exhalation ,Time constant ,Hyperinflation ,Gas trapping ,Ventilation distribution ,Airway resistance ,Mechanical ventilation ,Lung ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background Expiratory time constants are used to quantify emptying of the lung as a whole, and emptying of individual lung compartments. Breathing low-density helium/oxygen mixtures may modify regional time constants so as to redistribute ventilation, potentially reducing gas trapping and hyperinflation for patients with obstructive lung disease. In the present work, bench and mathematical models of the lung were used to study the influence of heterogeneous patterns of obstruction on compartmental and whole-lung time constants. Methods A two-compartment mechanical test lung was used with the resistance in one compartment held constant, and a series of increasing resistances placed in the opposite compartment. Measurements were made over a range of lung compliances during ventilation with air or with a 78/22% mixture of helium/oxygen. The resistance imposed by the breathing circuit was assessed for both gases. Experimental results were compared with predictions of a mathematical model applied to the test lung and breathing circuit. In addition, compartmental and whole-lung time constants were compared with those reported by the ventilator. Results Time constants were greater for larger minute ventilation, and were reduced by substituting helium/oxygen in place of air. Notably, where time constants were long due to high lung compliance (i.e. low elasticity), helium/oxygen improved expiratory flow even for a low level of resistance representative of healthy, adult airways. In such circumstances, the resistance imposed by the external breathing circuit was significant. Mathematical predictions were in agreement with experimental results. Time constants reported by the ventilator were well-correlated with those determined for the whole-lung and for the low-resistance compartment, but poorly correlated with time constants determined for the high-resistance compartment. Conclusions It was concluded that breathing a low-density gas mixture, such as helium/oxygen, can improve expiratory flow from an obstructed lung compartment, but that such improvements will not necessarily affect time constants measured by the ventilator. Further research is required to determine if alternative measurements made at the ventilator level are predictive of regional changes in ventilation. It is anticipated that such efforts will be aided by continued development of mathematical models to include pertinent physiological and pathophysiological phenomena that are difficult to reproduce in mechanical test systems.
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- 2012
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18. Affective states in normal and depressed older people.
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Lawton MP, Parmelee PA, Katz IR, and Nesselroade J
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AFFECTIVE disorders ,DEPRESSION in old age - Abstract
Ratings on a 10-item affect checklist yielding composite positive affect and negative affect scores were made daily for 30 days by older people in residential care: 19 were diagnosed as having major depression, 21 had minor depression, and 37 were without psychiatric diagnosis ('normal'). Mean levels of positive affect were highest in normal people and least in those with major depression; negative affect was lowest in normal ones and highest in those with a major depression. Variability was least among those with major depression in positive affect and among normal people in negative affect, while residents with minor depression showed some tendency, although inconsistent, toward greater day-to-day variability in positive affect. Patterns of invariance were such that those with major depression tended to be consistently lacking in positive affect but were variable in negative affect; normal people showed variability in positive affect but a relatively unvarying lack of negative affect. Clinical major depression was thus characterized less by 'pervasive' depressive affect than by anhedonia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
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19. Impact of Implementation Facilitation on the REACH VET Clinical Program for Veterans at Risk for Suicide.
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Landes SJ, Matarazzo BB, Pitcock JA, Drummond KL, Smith BN, Kirchner JE, Clark KA, Gerard GR, Jankovsky MC, Brenner LA, Reger MA, Eagan AE, Raciborski R, Painter J, Townsend JC, Jegley SM, Singh RS, Trafton JA, McCarthy JF, and Katz IR
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- Humans, United States, Adult, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Suicide Prevention, Veterans psychology, Program Evaluation, United States Department of Veterans Affairs
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Objective: In 2017, the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) implemented a national suicide prevention program, called Recovery Engagement and Coordination for Health-Veterans Enhanced Treatment (REACH VET), that uses a predictive algorithm to identify, attempt to reach, assess, and care for patients at the highest risk for suicide. The authors aimed to evaluate whether facilitation enhanced implementation of REACH VET at VHA facilities not meeting target completion rates., Methods: In this hybrid effectiveness-implementation type 2 program evaluation, a quasi-experimental pre-post design was used to assess changes in implementation outcome measures evaluated 6 months before and 6 months after onset of facilitation of REACH VET implementation at 23 VHA facilities. Measures included percentages of patients with documented coordinator and provider acknowledgment of receipt, care evaluation, and outreach attempt. Generalized estimating equations were used to compare differences in REACH VET outcome measures before and after facilitation. Qualitative interviews were conducted with personnel and were explored via template analysis., Results: Time had a significant effect in all outcomes models (p<0.001). An effect of facilitation was significant only for the outcome of attempted outreach. Patients identified by REACH VET had significantly higher odds of having a documented outreach attempt after facilitation of REACH VET implementation, compared with before facilitation. Site personnel felt supported and reported that the external facilitators were helpful and responsive., Conclusions: Facilitation of REACH VET implementation was associated with an improvement in outreach attempts to veterans identified as being at increased risk for suicide. Outreach is critical for engaging veterans in care., Competing Interests: Dr. Landes reports serving as a consultant for RAND and UTHealth Houston. Dr. Kirchner reports serving as a consultant for ViiV Healthcare. Dr. Brenner reports receiving editorial remuneration from Wolters Kluwer and royalties from the American Psychological Association and Oxford University Press and serving as a consultant for sports leagues. Dr. Trafton reports being employed by the Institute for Brain Potential. The other authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.
- Published
- 2024
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20. Post-traumatic stress disorder: rethinking diagnosis.
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Fischer IC, Pietrzak RH, Maercker A, Shalev AY, Katz IR, and Harpaz-Rotem I
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- Humans, Risk Factors, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnosis
- Abstract
Competing Interests: IH-R receives funding from Boehringer Ingelheim International through investigator-initiated research into Subtyping PTSD - Precision Psychiatry. All other authors declare no competing interests. The opinions expressed in this Comment are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views or policy of the US Department of Veterans Affairs or US Government.
- Published
- 2023
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21. Additional comparisons between PHQ-9 responses from clinical and survey data.
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Katz IR, Resnick SG, Liebmann EP, and Hoff RA
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- Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Patient Health Questionnaire, Depression
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Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
- Published
- 2023
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22. Estimating the per-protocol effect of lithium on suicidality in a randomized trial of individuals with depression or bipolar disorder.
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Szmulewicz A, Madenci A, Ferguson R, Liang MH, Lew R, Katz IR, and Hernán MA
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- Humans, Lithium adverse effects, Depression, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Bipolar Disorder drug therapy, Depressive Disorder, Major drug therapy, Suicide
- Abstract
Background: The CSP590 randomized trial was designed to estimate the effect of lithium on suicidality. After a third of the intended number of participants were enrolled, the hazard ratio of suicidality was 1.10 (95% CI: 0.77, 1.55). Based on this, the trial was stopped for futility. However, only 17% of patients adhered to the specified protocol., Aims: The objective was to estimate the per-protocol effect of lithium on suicidality, that is, the effect of adhering to the treatment strategies as specified in the protocol., Methods: We stopped individuals' follow-up if/when they showed evidence of nonadherence. We then conducted the analysis in the restricted sample, adjusting for prognostic factors that predict adherence via inverse probability weighting. The primary outcome was the 12-month risk of suicidality (including death from suicide, suicide attempt, interrupted attempt, hospitalization specifically to prevent suicide)., Results: The estimated 12-month risk of suicidality was 18.8% for lithium, and 24.3% for placebo. The risk ratio was 0.78 (95% CI: 0.43, 1.37) and the risk difference -5.5 percentage points (95% CI: -17.5, 5.5). Results were consistent across sensitivity analyses., Conclusions: With one-third of the targeted sample size, lithium effects (compared with placebo) ranging between a 17.5% reduction and a 5.5% increase in the risk of suicidality were highly compatible with the data. Thus, a protective effect of lithium on suicidality among patients with bipolar disorder or major depressive disorder cannot be ruled out. Trials should incorporate adequate per-protocol analyses into the decision-making processes for stopping trials for futility.
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- 2023
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23. Outcomes for treatment of depression in the Veterans Health Administration: Rates of response and remission calculated from clinical and survey data.
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Liebmann EP, Resnick SG, Hoff RA, and Katz IR
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- Humans, United States, Veterans Health, Surveys and Questionnaires, Electronic Health Records, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Depression therapy, Veterans
- Abstract
Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) quality measures for depression treatment aggregate Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ)-9 data from routine clinical assessments recorded in electronic health records (EHR). To determine whether aggregated PHQ-9 data in US Veterans Health Administration (VHA) EHRs should be used to characterize the organization's performance, we compared rates for depression response and remission calculated from EHRs with rates calculated with data representing the underlying Veteran patient population estimated using Veterans Outcome Assessment (VOA) survey data. We analyzed data from initial assessments and 3-month follow-up for Veterans beginning treatment for depression. EHR data were available for only a minority of Veteran patients, and the group of Veterans with EHR data differed from the underlying Veteran patient population with respect to demographic and clinical characteristics. Aggregated rates of response and remission from EHR data were significantly different from estimates based on representative VOA data. The findings suggest that until patient-reported outcome from EHRs are available for a substantial majority of patients receiving care, aggregated measures of patient outcomes derived from these data cannot be assumed to be representative of the outcomes for the overall population, and they should not be used as outcome-based measures of quality or performance., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Funding declaration: These studies were funded as part of clinical operations by the VA Office of Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Submission declaration: This work has not been published previously, (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2023
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24. The Veterans Health Administration REACH VET Program: Suicide Predictive Modeling in Practice.
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Matarazzo BB, Eagan A, Landes SJ, Mina LK, Clark K, Gerard GR, McCarthy JF, Trafton J, Bahraini NH, Brenner LA, Keen A, Gamble SA, Lawson WC, Katz IR, and Reger MA
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- United States, Humans, Veterans Health, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Suicide Prevention, Suicide, Veterans
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The U.S. Veterans Health Administration developed a suicide prediction statistical model and implemented a novel clinical program, Recovery Engagement and Coordination for Health-Veterans Enhanced Treatment (REACH VET). This high-value suicide prevention program aims to efficiently identify patients at risk and connect them with care. Starting in April 2017, national REACH VET metric data were collected from electronic health records to evaluate required task completion. By October 2020, 98% of veterans identified (N=6,579) were contacted by providers and had their care evaluated. In the nation's largest health care system, it was feasible to implement a clinical program based on a suicide prediction model.
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- 2023
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25. Suicide risk following a new cancer diagnosis among Veterans in Veterans Health Administration care.
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Dent KR, Szymanski BR, Kelley MJ, Katz IR, and McCarthy JF
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- United States, Humans, Veterans Health, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans psychology, Suicide psychology, Neoplasms
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Background: Cancer diagnoses are associated with an increased risk for suicide. The aim of this study was to evaluate this association among Veterans receiving Veterans Health Administration (VHA) care, a population that has an especially high suicide risk., Methods: Among 4,926,373 Veterans with VHA use in 2011 and in 2012 or 2013, and without VHA cancer diagnoses in 2011, we assessed suicide risk following incident cancer diagnoses. Risk time was from initial VHA use in 2012-2013 to 12/31/2018 or death, whichever came first. Cox proportional hazards regression models evaluated associations between new cancer diagnoses and suicide risk, adjusting for age, sex, VHA regional network, and mental health comorbidities. Suicide rates were calculated among Veterans with new cancer diagnoses through 84 months following diagnosis., Results: A new cancer diagnosis corresponded to a 47% higher suicide risk (Adjusted Hazard Ratio [aHR] = 1.47, 95% CI: 1.33-1.63). The cancer subtype associated with the highest suicide risk was esophageal cancer (aHR = 6.01, 95% CI: 3.73-9.68), and other significant subtypes included head and neck (aHR = 3.55, 95% CI: 2.74-4.62) and lung cancer (aHR = 2.35, 95% CI: 1.85-3.00). Cancer stages 3 (aHR = 2.36, 95% CI: 1.80-3.11) and 4 (aHR = 3.53, 95% CI: 2.81-4.43) at diagnosis were positively associated with suicide risk. Suicide rates were highest within 3 months following diagnosis and remained elevated in the 3-6- and 6-12-month periods following diagnosis., Conclusion: Among Veteran VHA users, suicide risk was elevated following new cancer diagnoses. Risk was particularly high in the first 3 months. Additional screening and suicide prevention efforts may be warranted for VHA Veterans newly diagnosed with cancer., (Published 2022. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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26. Progress toward a performance measure for mental health based on a generic patient- reported outcome measure: Findings from the Veterans Outcome Assessment survey.
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Katz IR, Liebmann EP, Resnick SG, Hoff RA, and Schmidt EM
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- Humans, United States, Mental Health, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Quality of Life, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
We report on studies conducted to develop outcome-based performance measures (PROM-PMs) based on generic patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) that could support strategies for quality improvement applicable to all patients in a mental health system. Data were from the Veterans Outcome Assessment Survey at baseline and three months for the Mental Component Score (MCS-12), a widely used measure of mental health-related quality of life, for 15,540 outpatients beginning treatment in General Mental Health clinics in 140 Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities. Mental health diagnoses from medical records were coded using hierarchical categories. Mental health staffing levels and quality measures were from administrative data. Changes in MCS-12 scores were associated with demographics, baseline scores, and diagnostic categories; in fully adjusted models, differences between facilities accounted for only 0.5% of the total variance between patients. There were small but significant associations of both baseline and changes in MCS-12 scores with staffing levels and administrative measures of the quality of care that support the potential value of adjusted measures of changes in MCS-12 as a PROM-PM. Remaining issues include the low proportion of variability that can be attributed to differences between facilities and the associations of staffing and quality with possible case-mix adjustment variables., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest All of the authors are employees of the US Department of Veterans Affairs. None have other potential conficts to declare., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2022
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27. Comparative risks of all-cause mortality for Veterans with schizophrenia with ongoing receipt of clozapine and other antipsychotic medications.
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Katz IR, Szymanski BR, Marder SR, Shotwell A, Hein TC, McCarthy JF, and Bowersox NW
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- Benzodiazepines therapeutic use, Humans, Olanzapine therapeutic use, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Clozapine therapeutic use, Schizophrenia drug therapy, Veterans
- Abstract
To guide care for patients with schizophrenia, the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) evaluated the associations between current or recent use of clozapine and all-cause mortality and explored associations for other antipsychotic medications. Using a case-control design, patients with schizophrenia who died in fiscal years 2014-2018 were matched on age, sex, race, and VHA facility to up to 10 controls who were alive on the case's date of death (index date). Medication coverage during the 91 days before the index date was classified as none, partial (1-44 days), and consistent (45-91 days). Medication coverage patterns during the index period were compared to coverage patterns during the period of 92-182 days prior to index date with each medication coverage classified as no change, no coverage, increased, or decreased. Conditional logistic regression analyses controlling for patient characteristics identified no associations of consistent or increasing clozapine coverage with mortality; partial and decreasing coverage were associated with greater mortality and these effects did not differ from those of other the medications considered. Exploratory analyses considering non-clozapine antipsychotic agents suggest that consistent coverage by olanzapine may be associated with increased mortality, that mortality associated with olanzapine may be greater than aripiprazole, and that this effect can be attributed primarily to patients with diabetes. Further study of this topic is needed., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2022
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28. Risk for PTSD symptom worsening during new PTSD treatment episode in a nationally representative sample of treatment-seeking U.S. veterans with subthreshold PTSD.
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Gross GM, Pietrzak RH, Hoff RA, Katz IR, and Harpaz-Rotem I
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- Humans, Male, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Symptom Flare Up, Syndrome, United States epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnosis, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic therapy, Veterans
- Abstract
Previous research has examined risk factors associated with poorer treatment outcomes for military Veterans with PTSD. However, work has not examined risk for symptom worsening among Veterans with subthreshold PTSD. The aim of this study was to examine demographic, psychiatric, physical health, and pre-treatment PTSD symptom clusters associated with clinically significant worsening of PTSD among a nationally representative sample of United States (U.S.) Veterans with subthreshold PTSD. Participants were Veterans (weighted N = 3162; unweighted N = 236) with subthreshold PTSD entering a new episode of treatment at U.S. Veterans Affairs PTSD specialty clinics during fiscal years 2018 and 2019. Data was collected as part of the Veterans Outcome Assessment, a yearly baseline and 3-month follow-up telephone survey. Analyses used weighted calculations to support the use of VOA data to draw inferences about all eligible Veterans, and binary logistic regression was used to examine risk factors for symptom worsening. Over 1/3 (37.7%) of Veterans with subthreshold PTSD experienced clinically significant symptom worsening from baseline to follow-up. Adjusted analyses revealed several risk factors for symptom worsening, including demographic (e.g., male sex, White race), psychiatric (personality and anxiety disorders), health care utilization (e.g., more primary care encounters in the previous year), physical health disability, and specific baseline PTSD symptom clusters (negative affect and anxious arousal). Findings suggest that Veterans with subthreshold symptoms seeking treatment for PTSD are at risk for symptom worsening, and highlight the importance of assessment, prevention, and treatment in targeting veterans with PTSD symptoms below the diagnostic threshold., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2022
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29. Suicide Risk and Lithium-Reply.
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Katz IR, Ferguson RE, and Liang MH
- Subjects
- Humans, Violence, Lithium adverse effects, Suicide
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- 2022
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30. Interpreting patient reports of perceived change during treatment for depression: Findings from the Veterans Outcome Assessment survey.
- Author
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Liebmann EP, Resnick SG, Hoff RA, and Katz IR
- Subjects
- Depression diagnosis, Depression therapy, Humans, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Patient Health Questionnaire, Surveys and Questionnaires, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
This study addressed ongoing questions about the meaning of patients' perceptions of change during treatment. The study used data from the Veterans Outcome Assessment survey for patients with a depressive disorder, without mental health comorbidities, treated in Department of Veterans Affairs general mental health clinics (n = 694). Perceived changes in problems/symptoms, other domains, and the quality of communication with providers were evaluated with items from the Experience of Care & Health Outcomes (ECHO) survey. Depressive symptoms were measured with the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9). Linear regression models evaluated associations of perceived change at 3-months post-baseline with observed change in PHQ-9 scores, scores on other patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), and ratings of communication with providers. Patients' reports of their clinical condition at follow-up together with ratings of communication accounted for approximately one-third of the variance in patients' perceptions of change. Adding change-scores based on baseline and follow-up scores on the PHQ-9 and other PROMs did not improve model fit. The findings suggest that patient reports of perceived change during treatment reflect their current clinical state and their experience of care more closely than actual changes in the PHQ-9 or other PROMs., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2022
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31. Associations between patient experience and clinical outcomes in substance use disorder clinics: Findings from the veterans outcomes assessment survey.
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Liebmann EP, Resnick SG, Hoff RA, and Katz IR
- Subjects
- Humans, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Patient Outcome Assessment, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Substance-Related Disorders therapy, Veterans
- Abstract
Background: Patient-centeredness is a cornerstone of substance use disorder (SUD) treatment. Patient-experience measures are potential tools for the routine assessment of patient-centered SUD care and may be valuable measures to inform quality monitoring improvement efforts. Little research exists on the predictive validity of patient-experience measures in SUD care., Purpose: We report on findings from the Veterans Outcome Assessment (VOA) survey that provides information on Veterans Health Administration SUD specialty care at treatment initiation and approximately 3-months post-initiation., Methods: The VOA includes patient-reported outcomes across multiple domains, including the Brief Addiction Monitor (BAM-R), the Short-Form-12 (SF-12) and the Experience of Care and Health Outcome Survey (ECHO), and provides patient reports of the quality of provider communication and overall quality of SUD care., Results: Nearly 40% of veterans in SUD care gave the highest possible ratings for communication and quality at both baseline and follow-up. Ratings of communication at 3-months were associated with treatment discontinuation and both ratings of communication and quality at 3-months and were independently associated with SUD symptoms and with mental well-being at 3-months., Conclusions: This study provides preliminary support for the inclusion of patient experience measures, particularly ratings of provider communication, as part of routine assessment in SUD care. However, further work on the validity of ratings of provider communication using additional methodologies is likely important before piloting the inclusion of such measures in routine assessment, such as in measurement base care., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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32. Lithium Treatment in the Prevention of Repeat Suicide-Related Outcomes in Veterans With Major Depression or Bipolar Disorder: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Katz IR, Rogers MP, Lew R, Thwin SS, Doros G, Ahearn E, Ostacher MJ, DeLisi LE, Smith EG, Ringer RJ, Ferguson R, Hoffman B, Kaufman JS, Paik JM, Conrad CH, Holmberg EF, Boney TY, Huang GD, and Liang MH
- Subjects
- Adult, Antimanic Agents pharmacology, Antimanic Agents therapeutic use, Antipsychotic Agents pharmacology, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Double-Blind Method, Female, Humans, Lithium pharmacology, Lithium therapeutic use, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide, Attempted psychology, Suicide, Attempted statistics & numerical data, Veterans psychology, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Bipolar Disorder complications, Depressive Disorder, Major complications, Lithium standards, Outcome Assessment, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Suicide, Attempted prevention & control
- Abstract
Importance: Suicide and suicide attempts are persistent and increasing public health problems. Observational studies and meta-analyses of randomized clinical trials have suggested that lithium may prevent suicide in patients with bipolar disorder or depression., Objective: To assess whether lithium augmentation of usual care reduces the rate of repeated episodes of suicide-related events (repeated suicide attempts, interrupted attempts, hospitalizations to prevent suicide, and deaths from suicide) in participants with bipolar disorder or depression who have survived a recent event., Design, Setting, and Participants: This double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial assessed lithium vs placebo augmentation of usual care in veterans with bipolar disorder or depression who had survived a recent suicide-related event. Veterans at 29 VA medical centers who had an episode of suicidal behavior or an inpatient admission to prevent suicide within 6 months were screened between July 1, 2015, and March 31, 2019., Interventions: Participants were randomized to receive extended-release lithium carbonate beginning at 600 mg/d or placebo., Main Outcomes and Measures: Time to the first repeated suicide-related event, including suicide attempts, interrupted attempts, hospitalizations specifically to prevent suicide, and deaths from suicide., Results: The trial was stopped for futility after 519 veterans (mean [SD] age, 42.8 [12.4] years; 437 [84.2%] male) were randomized: 255 to lithium and 264 to placebo. Mean lithium concentrations at 3 months were 0.54 mEq/L for patients with bipolar disorder and 0.46 mEq/L for patients with major depressive disorder. No overall difference in repeated suicide-related events between treatments was found (hazard ratio, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.77-1.55). No unanticipated safety concerns were observed. A total of 127 participants (24.5%) had suicide-related outcomes: 65 in the lithium group and 62 in the placebo group. One death occurred in the lithium group and 3 in the placebo group., Conclusions and Relevance: In this randomized clinical trial, the addition of lithium to usual Veterans Affairs mental health care did not reduce the incidence of suicide-related events in veterans with major depression or bipolar disorders who experienced a recent suicide event. Therefore, simply adding lithium to existing medication regimens is unlikely to be effective for preventing a broad range of suicide-related events in patients who are actively being treated for mood disorders and substantial comorbidities., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01928446.
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- 2022
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33. Suicide among Veterans receiving Veterans Health Administration Home Based Primary Care and following discharge from Community Living Centers.
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Cooper SA, Szymanski BR, Karel MJ, Katz IR, and McCarthy JF
- Subjects
- Humans, Patient Discharge, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health, Suicide psychology, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: Veterans who receive Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Home Based Primary Care (HBPC) services and those discharged from VHA Community Living Centers (CLC) may be at increased risk of suicide. No studies to date have assessed suicide risks among HBPC patients. This study examined suicide risks among recipients of VHA HBPC services and following discharge from VHA CLCs, as compared to other Veteran VHA users., Methods: We identified three cohorts of 2013 Veteran VHA patients: 47,842 HBPC users, 17,725 with live discharges from CLCs, and 5,554,635 other VHA users. Using proportional hazards regression, we assessed risk of suicide through 2016., Results: Overall, HBPC recipients did not differ from the other cohorts in suicide risk. Although in unadjusted analyses CLC discharged patients had greater suicide risk than the general VHA patient cohort (hazard ratio (HR) = 1.73, 95% confidence interval = 1.25-2.41), this became nonsignificant when controlling for diagnoses., Conclusions: Overall findings did not identify differential suicide risk among VHA HBPC recipients in 2013, when compared to other Veteran VHA patient cohorts. Veterans discharged from VHA CLCs have increased mental health morbidity, which was associated with increased suicide risk., (© Published 2021. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.)
- Published
- 2021
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34. Performance of the PHQ-9 across conditions and comorbidities: Findings from the Veterans Outcome Assessment survey.
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Katz IR, Liebmann EP, Resnick SG, and Hoff RA
- Subjects
- Depression, Humans, Patient Health Questionnaire, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Surveys and Questionnaires, Depressive Disorder, Major diagnosis, Depressive Disorder, Major epidemiology, Veterans
- Abstract
Background: The items of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) represent the criterion symptoms for DSM-IV major depression. This study evaluated the extent to which the PHQ-9 functions as a patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) specific to patients with major depressive disorder., Method: Data were from the Veterans Outcome Assessment survey for 8848 patients beginning treatment in VA general mental health clinics, including 5754, re-surveyed after 3 months. The PHQ-9's performance as a PROM was evaluated by comparing rank order correlations between both initial scores and improvements over 3 months between the PHQ-9 and several transdiagnostic PROMs across a range of diagnoses and comorbidities. Performance of PHQ-9-related patient-reported outcome-based performance measures (PROM-PM) were evaluated by comparing rates of response and remission across patient groups., Results: Correlations between the PHQ-9 and transdiagnostic measures were significant and comparable in magnitude across a range of diagnoses and for cases with depression with or without comorbidities. Rates of response and remission were comparable across most patient groups., Limitations: Limitations include use of clinical diagnoses as recorded in health records, and the relatively short time between assessments., Conclusions: In these settings, the PHQ-9 functions more as a general measure of symptoms or distress than as a disease-specific scale. This supports its use as a PROM for patients beyond those with major depression, including those with related diagnoses and those with comorbidities, and use of related PROM-PMs in clinical settings where diagnoses may not be precise and comorbidities may be common., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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35. Evaluation of the Recovery Engagement and Coordination for Health-Veterans Enhanced Treatment Suicide Risk Modeling Clinical Program in the Veterans Health Administration.
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McCarthy JF, Cooper SA, Dent KR, Eagan AE, Matarazzo BB, Hannemann CM, Reger MA, Landes SJ, Trafton JA, Schoenbaum M, and Katz IR
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Program Evaluation methods, Program Evaluation statistics & numerical data, Suicide psychology, Suicide statistics & numerical data, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs organization & administration, United States Department of Veterans Affairs statistics & numerical data, Veterans psychology, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Suicide Prevention
- Abstract
Importance: The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) implemented a national clinical program using a suicide risk prediction algorithm, Recovery Engagement and Coordination for Health-Veterans Enhanced Treatment (REACH VET), in which clinicians facilitate care enhancements for individuals identified in local top 0.1% suicide risk tiers. Evaluation studies are needed., Objective: To determine associations with treatment engagement, health care utilization, suicide attempts, safety plan documentation, and 6-month mortality., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study used triple differences analyses comparing 6-month changes in outcomes after vs before program entry for individuals entering the REACH VET program (March 2017-December 2018) vs a similarly identified top 0.1% suicide risk tier cohort from prior to program initiation (March 2014-December 2015), adjusting for trends across subthreshold cohorts. Subcohort analyses (including individuals from March 2017-June 2018) evaluated difference-in-differences for cause-specific mortality using death certificate data. The subthreshold cohorts included individuals in the top 0.3% to 0.1% suicide risk tier, below the threshold for REACH VET eligibility, from the concurrent REACH VET period and from the pre-REACH VET period. Data were analyzed from December 2019 through September 2021., Exposures: REACH VET-designated clinicians treatment reevaluation and outreach for care enhancements, including safety planning, increased monitoring, and interventions to enhance coping., Main Outcomes and Measures: Process outcomes included VHA scheduled, completed, and missed appointments; mental health visits; and safety plan documentation and documentation within 6 months for individuals without plans within the prior 2 years. Clinical outcomes included mental health admissions, emergency department visits, nonfatal suicide attempts, and all-cause, suicide, and nonsuicide external-cause mortality., Results: A total of 173 313 individuals (mean [SD] age, 51.0 [14.7] years; 161 264 [93.1%] men and 12 049 [7.0%] women) were included in analyses, including 40 816 individuals eligible for REACH VET care and 36 604 individuals from the pre-REACH VET period in the top 0.1% of suicide risk. The REACH VET intervention was associated with significant increases in completed outpatient appointments (adjusted triple difference [ATD], 0.31; 95% CI, 0.06 to 0.55) and proportion of individuals with new safety plans (ATD, 0.08; 95% CI, 0.06 to 0.10) and reductions in mental health admissions (ATD, -0.08; 95% CI, -0.10 to -0.05), emergency department visits (ADT, -0.03; 95% CI, -0.06 to -0.01), and suicide attempts (ADT, -0.05; 95% CI, -0.06 to -0.03). Subcohort analyses did not identify differences in suicide or all-cause mortality (eg, age-and-sex-adjusted difference-in-difference for suicide mortality, 0.0007; 95% CI, -0.0006 to 0.0019)., Conclusions and Relevance: These findings suggest that REACH VET implementation was associated with greater treatment engagement and new safety plan documentation and fewer mental health admissions, emergency department visits, and suicide attempts. Clinical programs using risk modeling may be effective tools to support care enhancements and risk reduction.
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- 2021
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36. Suicide mortality and related behavior following calls to the Veterans Crisis Line by Veterans Health Administration patients.
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Hannemann CM, Katz IR, McCarthy ME, Hughes GJ, McKeon R, and McCarthy JF
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- Humans, Male, Mental Health, Middle Aged, Suicidal Ideation, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health, Suicide, Veterans
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess outcomes for Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients following calls to the Veterans Crisis Line (VCL)., Methods: 158,927 VHA patients had an initial VCL call in 2010-2015 with documented identifiers. Multivariable proportional hazards regressions assessed risks of suicide and suicide-related behavior through 12 months. Covariates included age, sex, region, mental health encounters in the prior year, time of day, weekday/weekend status, call outcome, and responder determination of caller risk., Results: Annualized suicide rates per 100,000 within 1, 3, 6, and 12 months were 797, 520, 387, and 298, respectively. Average age was 49.9 (SD = 15.2), 86.5% were male, 68.6% received mental health encounters in the prior year, and 5.9% had calls categorized as at high risk. Adjusting for covariates, suicide risk was greater among male callers and those with calls categorized as at high or moderate risk., Conclusions: Veterans Crisis Line serves a high-risk population at a critical time. Rates were particularly high within one month and remained substantially elevated through 12 months. Findings have directly informed ongoing efforts to enhance coordination between VCL and VHA to support suicide prevention., (© Published 2020. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.)
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- 2021
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37. Facility-Level Excess Mortality of VHA Patients With Mental Health or Substance Use Disorder Diagnoses.
- Author
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Szymanski BR, Hein TC, Schoenbaum M, McCarthy JF, and Katz IR
- Subjects
- Humans, Mental Health, Retrospective Studies, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Depressive Disorder, Major, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Veterans
- Abstract
Objective: Individuals with mental or substance use disorders have higher mortality rates than people in the general population. How excess mortality varies across health care facilities is unknown. The authors sought to investigate facility-level mortality rates among Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients who had received diagnoses of mental or substance use disorders., Methods: An electronic medical records-based retrospective cohort study was conducted, encompassing 8,812,373 unique users of 139 VHA facilities from 2011 to 2016. Covariates included age, sex, and past-year diagnoses of serious mental illness, posttraumatic stress disorder, major depressive disorder, other mental health conditions, or substance use disorders. The outcome was all-cause mortality per comprehensive Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense searches of the National Death Index. Proportional hazards regression was used to calculate overall and facility-specific hazard ratios (HRs) for each diagnosis group, adjusted for age, sex, and comorbid medical conditions., Results: Overall, all-cause mortality was statistically significantly elevated among VHA users with mental health diagnoses (HR=1.21, 95% confidence interval=1.20-1.22). HRs varied across facilities consistently over time. At the VHA facility level, diagnostic groups were significantly correlated with the degree of excess mortality. Results were similar in sensitivity analyses that excluded deaths from suicide or drug or alcohol overdose., Conclusions: VHA users with mental or substance use disorder diagnoses had elevated mortality rates. Correlation in excess mortality across two periods indicated that facility differences in excess mortality were persistent and therefore potentially associated with facility- and community-level factors, which may help inform quality improvement efforts to reduce mortality rates.
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- 2021
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38. Further Analyses: Facility-Level Excess Mortality for VHA Patients With Mental and Substance Use Disorder Diagnoses.
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Szymanski BR, Hein TC, and Katz IR
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Mental Disorders, Substance-Related Disorders, Veterans
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- 2021
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39. Associations between patient experience and clinical outcomes in general mental health clinics: Findings from the veterans outcomes assessment survey.
- Author
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Katz IR, Resnick S, and Hoff R
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Ambulatory Care Facilities, Communication, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Health, Middle Aged, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health, Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Patient Satisfaction, Physician-Patient Relations, Quality of Health Care, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
For mental health, evidence linking the patients' experiences of care with treatment outcomes is limited. We report findings from the Veterans Outcome Assessment (VOA) survey of Veterans beginning treatment in Veterans Health Administration (VHA) mental health programs with follow-up after approximately 3 months. In addition to assessments of symptoms and functioning, it includes key components of the Experience of Care and Health Outcomes (ECHO) survey including patient reports of communication with clinicians and of the overall quality of mental health care. For Veterans treated in VHA general mental health clinics, significant associations between ratings of communication and quality at baseline, and both retention in treatment and patient-reported outcomes assessed at follow-up demonstrate that better patient experience predicts more favorable outcomes. Further research is necessary to determine whether including them in measurement-based care could improve outcomes by facilitating the early identification of problems in providing care., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2021
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40. Increased Risk of Dementia Among Veterans With Bipolar Disorder or Schizophrenia Receiving Care in the VA Health System.
- Author
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Ahearn EP, Szymanski BR, Chen P, Sajatovic M, Katz IR, and McCarthy JF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Middle Aged, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health, Young Adult, Bipolar Disorder epidemiology, Dementia epidemiology, Schizophrenia epidemiology, Veterans
- Abstract
Objective: The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) provides a continuum of care over the life course. Among U.S. adults, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia are associated with increased risk of dementia. To inform service planning, this study assessed the incidence of dementia among veteran VHA patients with bipolar disorder or schizophrenia, with adjustment for comorbid medical conditions., Methods: Using data from the VHA Corporate Data Warehouse, the authors identified all veterans who received VHA care in 2004 and 2005 without a dementia diagnosis and who were alive and between ages 18 and 100 as of January 1, 2006. Individuals were categorized as having bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, or neither condition on the basis of diagnoses in 2004-2005. Among ongoing VHA users, incidence of dementia was assessed for up to 10 years (2006-2015)., Results: The cohort included 3,648,852 individuals. After analyses controlled for baseline comorbid general medical conditions and substance use disorders, the incidence rate ratios (IRRs) for dementia were 2.92 for those with schizophrenia and 2.26 for those with bipolar disorder, compared with VHA patients with neither condition., Conclusions: Among veterans receiving VHA care, diagnoses of bipolar disorder and schizophrenia were each associated with increased risk of receiving a new diagnosis of dementia, even when analyses controlled for baseline medical comorbidities. IRRs were elevated for patients with either condition, compared with those with neither condition, and highest for those with schizophrenia. VHA clinicians should evaluate patients for dementia when signs or symptoms of cognitive impairment are present.
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- 2020
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41. Hypertension Treatment Modality and Suicide Risk Among Veterans in Veterans Health Administration Care From 2015 to 2017.
- Author
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Dent KR, Griffin CA, McCarthy JF, and Katz IR
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Diabetes Mellitus drug therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Risk Factors, Severity of Illness Index, Suicidal Ideation, Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists adverse effects, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors adverse effects, Hypertension drug therapy, Suicide statistics & numerical data, Veterans statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Importance: The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) serves a population of veterans with a high prevalence of comorbid health conditions and increased risk for suicide., Objective: To replicate the findings of a previous study and assess whether exposure to angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) is associated with differential suicide risk compared with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) among veterans receiving VHA care., Design, Setting, and Participants: This nested case-control design included all suicide decedents from 2015 to 2017 with a VHA inpatient or outpatient encounter in the prior year and with either an active ACEI or ARB prescription in the 100 days prior to death. Using a 4:1 ratio, controls were matched to cases by age, sex, and hypertension and diabetes diagnoses. Controls were alive at the time of the death of the matched case, had a VHA encounter within the previous year, and had either an active ACEI or ARB medication fill within 100 days before the death of the matched case., Exposures: An active ACEI or ARB prescription within 100 days before the death of the case., Main Outcomes and Measures: Cases were suicide decedents from 2015 to 2017 per National Death Index search results included in the Veteran Affairs/Department of Defense Mortality Data Repository., Results: Among 1309 cases, the median (interquartile range [IQR]) age was 68 (60-76) years and among 5217 controls, the median (IQR) age was 67 (60-76) years, and 1.9% of veterans in both groups were female. ARBs were received by 20.2% of controls and 19.6% of cases; ACEIs were received by 79.8% of controls and 80.4% of cases. The crude suicide odds ratio for ARBs vs ACEIs was 0.966 (95% CI, 0.828-1.127). Controlling for covariates, the adjusted odds ratio for ARBs was 0.985 (95% CI, 0.834-1.164). Sensitivity analyses using only those covariates that differed significantly between groups, restricting to veterans ages 65 and older, dropping matching criteria, and adjusting for the quantity and temporal proximity of ACEI and ARB exposure in the 100 days prior to the index date, had consistent findings., Conclusions and Relevance: This case-control study did not identify differences in suicide risk by receipt of ARBs vs ACEIs in analyses specific to veterans receiving VHA care in contrast with findings from the referent study.
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- 2020
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42. Using patient-reported outcome measures for program evaluation: Design and findings on intention-to-treat outcomes from the Veterans Outcome Assessment survey.
- Author
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Katz IR, Resnick SG, Kasprow WJ, Boden MT, Cherkasova E, Fielstein EM, Trafton JA, and Hoff RA
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Intention to Treat Analysis trends, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome Assessment, Health Care trends, Program Evaluation trends, Psychotherapy standards, Psychotherapy trends, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs trends, Intention to Treat Analysis standards, Outcome Assessment, Health Care standards, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Program Evaluation standards, Surveys and Questionnaires standards, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
The Veterans Outcomes Assessment (VOA) program surveys Veteran Health Administration (VHA) patients when they begin mental health treatment and at follow-up at three months to obtain patient-reported outcomes measures (PROM). It complements VA's evolving program in measurement-based care by providing additional data that can be useful for program evaluation including assessments of patients who have not been seen for ongoing mental health care. In principle, it provides data on intention-to-treat outcomes for program evaluation to complement the outcomes for patients who are receiving ongoing treatment that can be derived from measurement-based care. VOA findings confirm differences in outcomes between patients who have continued to be seen for treatment and those who have not. Patients in general mental health clinics with no encounters between the baseline and follow-up assessments who reported discontinuing care because they did not want or need treatment improved more, and those who discontinued due to problems improved less than those who remained in treatment. Experience with VOA has identified a number of issues that must be addressed before it is possible to use intention-to-treat outcomes for program evaluation., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2020
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43. Brief Report: Opioid-Involved Overdose Mortality in United States Veterans.
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Peltzman T, Ravindran C, Schoen PM, Morley SW, Drexler K, Katz IR, and McCarthy JF
- Subjects
- Adult, Analgesics, Opioid classification, Analgesics, Opioid pharmacology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mortality, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs statistics & numerical data, Veterans Health statistics & numerical data, Opiate Overdose diagnosis, Opiate Overdose mortality
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: The purpose of this study is to assess trends in opioid-involved overdose mortality among US Veterans., Methods: Age-adjusted drug overdose mortality rates, overall and by opioid subtype, were assessed from National Death Index data for US Veterans; statistical significance of trends was assessed for 2010 to 2015 and 2015 to 2016., Results: Veteran age-adjusted overdose mortality rates increased 23.7% from 2010 to 2015 (19.7-24.4 of 100 000) and a further 20.4% through 2016 (29.3 of 100 000). Opioid involvement increased from 51.3% in 2010 to 62.1% in 2016, as opioid overdose rates increased from 10.9 to 19.5 of 100 000. Overdose mortality varied substantially by opioid subtype and demographics., Conclusions and Scientific Significance: This report provides the first-ever description of trends and characteristics of overdose mortality and opioid-involved deaths among US Veterans of military service for the period 2010 to 2016. With the exception of female Veterans and Veterans in Western States, it has been found that trends in Veteran overdose mortality paralleled rising rates of drug overdose observed in the United States more broadly. Published 2020. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA. (Am J Addict 2020;00:00-00)., (© 2020 American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry.)
- Published
- 2020
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44. Can "deaths of despair" serve as a focus for planning and evaluating clinical and preventive services for Veterans?
- Author
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Katz IR, Dent KR, Morley SW, Hein TC, Hoff RA, and McCarthy JF
- Abstract
Deaths of despair, a composite outcome including suicide and drug- and alcohol-related deaths, have been increasing, especially in subpopulations and geographic areas sensitive to economic and social hardships. The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) has begun evaluating the utility of this concept to guide planning and evaluations of clinical and preventive services for Veterans. In this study, mortality rates for middle-aged American men for 2013 to 2017 were from CDC WONDER, and rates for all Veterans, those using VHA healthcare services (VHA-utilizers), and other (non-VHA) Veterans were derived from National Death Index data. Findings demonstrated that rates for the composite were higher in VHA-utilizers and lower in non-VHA Veterans than middle-aged American men, consistent with use of VHA services by Veterans with the greatest needs. State rates in Veteran men were significantly and positively correlated with state rates for American men, and both were correlated with other characteristics of the social environment. The lack of correlation between rates for suicide and drug-related deaths indicates that deaths of despair cannot be modeled by assuming parallel paths from reactions to community-based stressors to the component outcomes; models should allow for an impact of community characteristics on partitioning between outcomes., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2020
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45. Concerns Raised by a Study of Suicide as an Adverse Drug Effect-Replicating Findings From Real-World Data.
- Author
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Katz IR
- Subjects
- Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors, Humans, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions, Suicide
- Published
- 2019
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46. Critical Periods for Increased Mortality After Discharge From Inpatient Mental Health Units: Opportunities for Prevention.
- Author
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Katz IR, Peltzman T, Jedele JM, and McCarthy JF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cause of Death trends, Confidence Intervals, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Protective Factors, Time Factors, United States epidemiology, Veterans psychology, Young Adult, Hospitals, Veterans, Mortality trends, Patient Discharge, Suicide, Attempted trends
- Abstract
Objective: Studies of patients in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health system and elsewhere have documented elevated mortality from suicide during a critical period within 30 to 90 days after discharge from inpatient mental health units. To support program planning, VA evaluated whether the elevated mortality during this critical period was specific to suicide or whether there were similar increases in other causes of death., Methods: Indicators of age, gender, inpatient diagnoses, and suicide attempts and ideation from VA records were combined with indicators of vital status and cause of death from the National Death Index. Analyses compared all-cause and cause-specific mortality in the first 30 and 90 days postdischarge with mortality in days 91 to 365 after discharge for the 106,430 VA patients discharged from inpatient mental health units in 2013-2014., Results: Elevated mortality during the first 30 and first 90 days after discharge was not specific to suicide. Higher rates of all-cause mortality were noted, including elevated mortality due to external causes other than suicide among young and middle-aged patients (ages 18-64) during the first 30 days and among older patients (≥65) during the first 90 days. An increase in natural-cause mortality among older patients was attributable to greater mortality among those with dementia diagnoses., Conclusions: Elevated rates of nonsuicide external-cause mortality in the critical period within 30 to 90 days after discharge from inpatient mental health care suggest important opportunities for prevention. Greater mortality among patients with dementia or related neurodegenerative diseases raises questions regarding current strategies for managing behavioral symptoms and transitions to end-of-life care.
- Published
- 2019
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47. Developing a practical suicide risk prediction model for targeting high-risk patients in the Veterans health Administration.
- Author
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Kessler RC, Hwang I, Hoffmire CA, McCarthy JF, Petukhova MV, Rosellini AJ, Sampson NA, Schneider AL, Bradley PA, Katz IR, Thompson C, and Bossarte RM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Models, Statistical, Risk Assessment methods, Suicide statistics & numerical data, United States Department of Veterans Affairs
- Abstract
Objectives: The US Veterans Health Administration (VHA) has begun using predictive modeling to identify Veterans at high suicide risk to target care. Initial analyses are reported here., Methods: A penalized logistic regression model was compared with an earlier proof-of-concept logistic model. Exploratory analyses then considered commonly-used machine learning algorithms. Analyses were based on electronic medical records for all 6,360 individuals classified in the National Death Index as having died by suicide in fiscal years 2009-2011 who used VHA services the year of their death or prior year and a 1% probability sample of time-matched VHA service users alive at the index date (n = 2,112,008)., Results: A penalized logistic model with 61 predictors had sensitivity comparable to the proof-of-concept model (which had 381 predictors) at target thresholds. The machine learning algorithms had relatively similar sensitivities, the highest being for Bayesian additive regression trees, with 10.7% of suicides occurred among the 1.0% of Veterans with highest predicted risk and 28.1% among the 5.0% of with highest predicted risk., Conclusions: Based on these results, VHA is using penalized logistic regression in initial intervention implementation. The paper concludes with a discussion of other practical issues that might be explored to increase model performance., (Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Substance use disorders and the risk of suicide mortality among men and women in the US Veterans Health Administration.
- Author
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Bohnert KM, Ilgen MA, Louzon S, McCarthy JF, and Katz IR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Suicide psychology, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans psychology, Young Adult, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Suicide statistics & numerical data, Veterans statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Limited information is available regarding links between specific substance use disorders (SUDs) and suicide mortality; however, the preliminary evidence that is available suggests that suicide risk associated with SUDs may differ for men and women. This study aimed to estimate associations between SUDs and suicide for men and women receiving Veterans Health Administration (VHA) care., Design: A cohort study using national administrative health records., Setting: National VHA system, USA., Participants: All VHA users in fiscal year (FY) 2005 who were alive at the beginning of FY 2006 (n = 4 863 086)., Measurements: The primary outcome of suicide mortality was assessed via FY 2006-2011 National Death Index (NDI) records. Current SUD diagnoses were the primary predictors of interest, and were assessed via FY 2004-2005 VHA National Patient Care Database (NPCD) records., Findings: In unadjusted analyses, a diagnosis of any current SUD and the specific current diagnoses of alcohol, cocaine, cannabis, opioid, amphetamine and sedative use disorders were all associated significantly with increased risk of suicide for both males and females [hazard ratios (HRs)] ranging from 1.35 for cocaine use disorder to 4.74 for sedative use disorder for men, and 3.89 for cannabis use disorder to 11.36 for sedative use disorder for women]. Further, the HR estimates for the relations between any SUD, alcohol, cocaine and opioid use disorders and suicide were significantly stronger for women than men (P < 0.05). After adjustment for other factors, most notably comorbid psychiatric diagnoses, associations linking SUDs with suicide were attenuated markedly and the greater suicide risk among females was observed for only any SUD and opioid use disorder (P < 0.05)., Conclusions: Current substance use disorders (SUDs) signal increased suicide risk, especially among women, and may be important markers to consider including in suicide risk assessment strategies. None the less, other co-occurring psychiatric disorders may partially explain associations between SUDs and suicide, as well as the observed excess suicide risk associated with SUDs among women., (Published 2017. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Clinical Utility of PHQ-9 Item 9 for Suicide Prediction: In Reply.
- Author
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Louzon SA, Bossarte R, McCarthy JF, and Katz IR
- Subjects
- Depression, Suicidal Ideation, Surveys and Questionnaires, Patient Health Questionnaire, Suicide
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Design and conduct of a provider survey to determine a clinically persuasive effect size in planning VA Cooperative Study #590 (Li+).
- Author
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Harrington KM, Liang MH, Hannagan K, Thwin SS, Ferguson RE, Morgenstern N, Flores E, and Katz IR
- Abstract
Background: The estimation of an effect size is an important step in designing an adequately powered, feasible clinical trial intended to change clinical practice. During the planning phase of VA Cooperative Study #590, "Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Study of Lithium for Preventing Repeated Suicidal Self-Directed Violence in Patients with Depression or Bipolar Disorder (Li+)," it was not clear what effect size would be considered large enough to influence prescribing behavior among practicing clinicians., Methods: We conducted an online survey of VA psychiatrists to assess their interest in the study question, their clinical experience with lithium, and their opinion about what suicide reduction rate would change their prescribing habits. The 9-item survey was hosted on SurveyMonkey
© and VA psychiatrists were individually emailed an invitation to complete an anonymous online survey. Three email waves were sent over three weeks., Results: Overall, 862 of 2713 VA psychiatrists (response rate = 31.8%) responded to the anonymous survey. 74% of the respondents would refer a patient to the proposed trial, 9% would not, and 17% were unsure. Presented with suicide reduction rates in 10% increments ranging from 10 to 100%, 61% of respondents indicated that they would use lithium if suicide attempts were reduced by at least 40%; 83% would use lithium if it reduced attempts by at least 50%., Conclusions: Even with the limitations of response bias and the reliability of responses on future prescribing behavior, a survey of potential users of a clinical trial's results offers a convenient, empirical method for determining and justifying clinically relevant effect sizes.- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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