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Providers' Attitudes Towards Treating Depression and Self-Reported Depression Treatment Practices in HIV Outpatient Care

Authors :
Julie K. O’Donnell
Amy Heine
Nathan M. Thielman
Melissa H. Watt
Julie Adams
James L. Raper
Kiana D. Bess
Anne Zinski
Bradley N. Gaynes
Brian W. Pence
Source :
AIDS Patient Care and STDs. 27:171-180
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2013.

Abstract

Depression is highly prevalent among HIV-infected patients, yet little is known about the quality of HIV providers' depression treatment practices. We assessed depression treatment practices of 72 HIV providers at three academic medical centers in 2010–2011 with semi-structured interviews. Responses were compared to national depression treatment guidelines. Most providers were confident that their role included treating depression. Providers were more confident prescribing a first antidepressant than switching treatments. Only 31% reported routinely assessing all patients for depression, 13% reported following up with patients within 2 weeks of starting an antidepressant, and 36% reported systematically assessing treatment response and tolerability in adjusting treatment. Over half of providers reported not being comfortable using the full FDA-approved dosing range for antidepressants. Systematic screening for depression and best-practices depression management were uncommon. Opportunities to increase HIV clinicians' comfort and confidence in treating depression, including receiving treatment support from clinic staff, are discussed.

Details

ISSN :
15577449 and 10872914
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS Patient Care and STDs
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cedd7fc3f4e0d3017385830a9852fe90
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/apc.2012.0406