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WASHINGTON, MD -- February 10, 1998 -- Americans who suffer from major
depression get the treatment and medication management they need less than
half as often as do their Canadian counterparts.

Steven Katz, MD, of the University of Michigan, and colleagues studied the
results of mental health surveys of 574 Americans and 250 residents of the
province of Ontario, aged 21 to 54, all of whom met the criteria for major
depression.

Writing in this month's issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine,
they report that only a small fraction received appropriate care in either
country -- 15 percent of the depressed Canadians and seven percent of the
depressed Americans surveyed.

They define appropriate medication management as a combination of self-reported
antidepressant medication use and four or more visits to a health care
provider within the previous 12 months -- the approximate guidelines of the
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research.

This between-country difference in care was the result of more Canadians
than Americans receiving any care for depression: 55 percent of depressed
persons
in Ontario received mental health services from either general practitioners
or mental health specialists, compared to only 30 percent of Americans.

The researchers attribute much of the difference between the two countries
to economic barriers, noting that Canada's national health plan provides
comprehensive mental health coverage. In Ontario, there are no limits on
either outpatient visits or inpatient stays for psychiatric care and only
minimal
co-payments are required for ambulatory services.

In the survey, more Americans said mental health services were too expensive
(about 32 percent compared to eight percent in Ontario) or they were unsure
where to go for them (33 percent compared to 15 percent).

But patient attitudes also contribute. In both countries approximately 40
percent of depressed persons who did not make contact (with a physician) did not
perceive the need for professional help, the authors write, adding more than
half of those who did perceive need for professional help did not seek it
because they felt that they would get better on their own or that
professional help would do no good.

The authors say their findings support contentions that reducing financial
barriers to mental health care can improve quality, but that even in Ontario the
prevalence of appropriate care remains too low.

"The low rate of contact due to knowledge and attitudinal barriers supports
the importance of efforts to educate the public about depression and its
treatments," he said. "Our findings clearly reinforce the notion that the
treatment of depression represents a missed opportunity for clinicians in
both countries.

"Thus, clinical guidelines that educate providers, especially general
physicians, about the recognition and treatment of depression may improve
quality. This strategy may be particularly useful in Ontario, where there is
relatively greater reliance on general practitioners to manage the treatment of
depression."

The research was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the
National Institute of Mental Health.

Judith Richards
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