How depression impacts patients with cardiovascular disease
Washington: Depression negatively impacts patients with cardiovascular disease, finds a study.
About one-fifth of cardiovascular disease patients suffer from depression. "While we don't know which comes first--depression or cardiovascular disease--the consensus is that depression is a risk marker for cardiovascular disease, meaning if you have cardiovascular disease, there is a higher likelihood that you could also have depression, when compared with the risk in the general population," said lead author Victor Okunrintemi from Baptist Health South Florida in Coral Gables, Florida.
In one study, Okunrintemi and colleagues evaluated patient experience, healthcare expenditure and resource use in a large population of adult cardiovascular disease patients, dividing them into two groups: those who had been diagnosed with depression and those who had not been diagnosed with depression.
Based on responses from a health questionnaire, patients who had not been diagnosed with depression were divided into high- and low-risk groups for depression.
When researchers compared high- and low-risk groups of cardiovascular patients without depression, they found:
-Those at high risk for depression spent more on overall and out-of-pocket healthcare expenditures yearly when compared with patients in the low-risk group.
-High-risk patients for depression were more than two times more likely to be hospitalized and used the emergency room than those at low risk.
-High-risk patients were more than five times more likely to have a poor self-perceived health status, and almost four times more likely to be dissatisfied with their healthcare.
-Patients at high risk for depression had notably worse healthcare-related quality of life.
"When we compared non-depressed patients to those who had been diagnosed with depression, we found those who were not depressed and yet had a higher risk for depression had worse healthcare experiences, increased use of the emergency room, poorer perception of their health status and a lower health-related quality of life than those who actually had depression," Okunrintemi said.
"That could be because people at high risk for depression simply haven't been diagnosed and treated for depression yet."
In a second study comparing health resource use and expenditures among heart attack patients with and without depression, Okunrintemi and colleagues found that heart attack patients diagnosed with depression were 54 percent more likely to be hospitalized and 43 percent more likely to have emergency room visits, compared to those not diagnosed with depression.
Furthermore, heart attack patients with depression spent an estimated $4,381 more, annually on healthcare expenses, compared with those without depression.
"Depression and heart attack often coexist, which has been associated with worse health experiences for these patients," he said. "As a quality improvement measure to increase healthcare efficiency, we recommend more aggressive depression screening at follow-up visits for heart attack patients."
The research was presented at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research Scientific Sessions 2018.