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Citation

Cárdenas Charry, María P.; Jassir Acosta, Maria P.; Uribe, José M.; Cepeda, Magda; Martinez Camblor, Pablo; Cubillos, Leonardo; Bartels, Sophia M.; Castro, Sergio M.; Marsch, Lisa A.; & Gómez-Restrepo, Carlos (2021). Relationship between the Sociodemographic Characteristics of Participants in the DIADA Project and the Rate of Compliance with Follow-up Assessments in the Initial Stage of the Intervention. Revista Colombiana de Psiquiatria, 50(Suppl. 1), 102-109. PMCID: PMC8658751

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Analyse the relationship between the sociodemographic profile of the DIADA study participants and the rate of compliance with the follow-up assessments in the early stage of this project's intervention for depression and unhealthy alcohol use offered within primary care.
METHODS: A non-experimental quantitative analysis was conducted. The sociodemographic data of DIADA [Detección y Atención Integral de Depresión y Abuso de Alcohol en Atención Primaria (Detection and Integrated Care for Depression and Alcohol Use in Primary Care)] study participants had been previously collected. At the time of the evaluation (September 12, 2019), only the participants who had been in the project for a minimum of 3 months were included. By using univariate (Chi-squared) analyses, we studied the association between participants' sociodemographic profile and their rate of compliance with the first follow-up assessment at 3 months after study initiation.
RESULTS: At the date of the evaluation, 584 adult participants were identified, of which 389 had been involved in the project for more than 3 months. From the participants included, 320 performed the first follow-up, while 69 did not. The compliance rate to the first follow-up was 82.3% (95 % [CI] 78.1%-86%) and was not affected by: site location, age, sex, civil status, level of education, use of smartphone, PHQ9 score (measuring depression symptomatology) or AUDIT score (measuring harmful alcohol use). Participants who do not use a smartphone, from rural areas and with a lower socioeconomic status, tended to show higher compliance rates. Statistically significant associations were found; participants with lower job stability and a lack of access to the Internet showed higher compliance rates to the early initial follow-up assessment.
CONCLUSIONS: The compliance rate was high and generally constant in spite of the variability of the sociodemographic profiles of the participants, although several sub-groups of participants showed particularly high rates of compliance. These findings may suggest that integrating mental health into primary care allows the structural and financial barriers that hinder access to health in Colombia to be broken down by raising awareness about mental illnesses, their high prevalence and the importance of timely and accessible medical management.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rcpeng.2021.06.006

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2021

Journal Title

Revista Colombiana de Psiquiatria

Author(s)

Cárdenas Charry, María P.
Jassir Acosta, Maria P.
Uribe, José M.
Cepeda, Magda
Martinez Camblor, Pablo
Cubillos, Leonardo
Bartels, Sophia M.
Castro, Sergio M.
Marsch, Lisa A.
Gómez-Restrepo, Carlos

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC8658751

Data Set/Study

Project DIADA (Detection and Integrated CAre for Depression and Alcohol Use in Primary Care)

Continent/Country

Colombia

ORCiD

Bartels - 0000-0002-9431-8735