Preventing Hospitalization in Depressed Rural Patients
Research center:
Lead researcher:
Project funded:
September 2004
Project completed:
September 2005
Topic:
Since this is one of the few studies that examines service substitution in rural populations, future studies are needed to determine the generalizability of our findings across geographic areas and time. These studies should seek to clarify the factors that lead to higher frequency and duration of hospitalization for rural patients, such as patient characteristics, provider characteristics, and insurance barriers. Future research should consider developing general medical and/or specialty care interventions that provide evidence-based care to depressed rural patients to determine whether 'excess' hospitalizations we observe in rural populations can be sufficiently reduced to pay for the costs of the intervention.
Publications
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Preventing Hospitalizations in Depressed Rural Primary Care Patients
WICHE Center for Rural Mental Health Research
Date: 05/2007
This study investigated the substitution of higher cost hospitalization for lower cost outpatient specialty care for depression and the extent to which insurance barriers impact service substitution patterns of outpatient specialty care for depression in rural and urban areas.