Litcius/Paper detail

Effectiveness of primary care psychological therapy services for the treatment of depression and anxiety in people living with dementia: Evidence from national healthcare records in England

G Bell, Céline El Baou, Rob Saunders, Joshua E. J. Buckman, Georgina Charlesworth, Marcus Richards, Barbara Brown, Shirley Nurock, Stuart Michael, Paul Ware, Elisa Aguirre, Miguel Rio, Claudia Cooper, Stephen Pilling, Amber John, Joshua Stott

2022EClinicalMedicine24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Depression and anxiety are common and deleterious in people living with dementia (PLWD). It is currently unknown whether routinely provided psychological therapy can help reduce these symptoms in PLWD. This study aimed to investigate improvements in depression and anxiety symptoms over the course of therapy offered in primary care psychological therapy services in PLWD and to compare outcomes to people without dementia. Methods: National data from Improving Access to Psychological Therapies services (IAPT) across England linked with Hospital Episode Statistics data, the Mental Health Services Dataset, and HES-ONS mortality data were used to identify 1,549 PLWD who completed a course of psychological treatment in IAPT between 2012-2019 and a propensity score matched control group without identified dementia. Outcome measures included pre-post intervention changes in depression (PHQ-9) and anxiety (GAD-7) symptoms and therapy outcomes (reliable improvement, recovery, deterioration). Findings: ·029) than a matched control sample without dementia. Interpretation: Psychological therapy may be beneficial for PLWD with depression or anxiety, but it is currently not as effective as for people without dementia. More research is needed to improve access to psychological therapies and to understand this discrepancy and how therapies can be adapted to further improve outcomes. Funding: This work was supported by the Alzheimer's Society.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAnxietyDepression (economics)DementiaPsychological interventionPsychiatryMental healthCollaborative CareIntervention (counseling)Internal medicineDiseaseMacroeconomicsEconomicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchMental Health Treatment and AccessFamily Caregiving in Mental Illness