<p>Depression remains a common and debilitating condition, and measurement-based care is widely recommended to guide treatment decisions. The study examined whether regular versus irregular completion of standardized symptom monitoring predicted differential improvement in depression outcomes within psychiatric specialty care. The research team analyzed electronic health record data from 502 adult outpatients between October 2023 and September 2024. The study categorized patients as regular (&gt; 50% of visits) or irregular (≤ 50%) completers of standardized measures and compared percent change in Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores from early to late treatment using linear regression. Patients with irregular monitoring demonstrated significantly greater symptom improvement than regular completers (27.9% vs. 16.4%; <i>p</i> = 0.002). Demographic and clinic characteristics showed no significant association with improvement. These findings suggest that monitoring frequency may influence outcomes in complex ways and underscore the need to clarify when and for whom routine symptom monitoring adds value in specialty behavioral health settings.</p>

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The Impact of Regular Symptom Monitoring on Depression Treatment Outcomes in Psychiatric Specialty Outpatient Care

  • Sorabh Singhal,
  • Allison G. Dempsey,
  • Alejandra C. Santisteban,
  • Susan K. Mikulich-Gilbertson

摘要

Depression remains a common and debilitating condition, and measurement-based care is widely recommended to guide treatment decisions. The study examined whether regular versus irregular completion of standardized symptom monitoring predicted differential improvement in depression outcomes within psychiatric specialty care. The research team analyzed electronic health record data from 502 adult outpatients between October 2023 and September 2024. The study categorized patients as regular (> 50% of visits) or irregular (≤ 50%) completers of standardized measures and compared percent change in Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores from early to late treatment using linear regression. Patients with irregular monitoring demonstrated significantly greater symptom improvement than regular completers (27.9% vs. 16.4%; p = 0.002). Demographic and clinic characteristics showed no significant association with improvement. These findings suggest that monitoring frequency may influence outcomes in complex ways and underscore the need to clarify when and for whom routine symptom monitoring adds value in specialty behavioral health settings.