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Release Date: Nov. 22, 2004
DEPRESSION TREATMENT BOOSTS EMPLOYEE PRODUCTIVITY
By Becky Ham, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
High-quality care for depression can improve productivity at work and lower
rates of workplace absenteeism, according to a new report.
A two-year program for depressed employees treated at 12 primary care practices
nationwide improved productivity at work by an average of 6 percent, or an
estimated annual value of $1,491 per depressed full-time employee.
The program reduced absenteeism by 22 percent in two years, saving the companies
an estimated $539 for each depressed full-time employee.
The study published in
the journal Medical Care is among the first research to “demonstrate that improving the quality of care for any chronic disease
has positive consequences for productivity and absenteeism,” say Kathryn
Rost, Ph.D., of University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and colleagues.
“Over the short term, improvements in productivity generally benefit
the majority of American employers who pay salaries rather than reimburse workers
for piecework or by commission. And over the longer term, improvements in productivity
may translate into employee raises,” Rost explains.
The program included 326
full- or part-time blue-collar and white-collar workers who were diagnosed
with depression
at the start of the study. The workers were
randomly assigned to receive either standard or “enhanced” depression
treatment from specially trained primary care providers who encouraged workers
to consider antidepressant medication and/or counseling.
Patients on the enhanced treatment plan were regularly contacted by a care
manager who discussed their symptoms and provided extra information about depression
treatment. The care manager also encouraged the patients to stick with their
treatments and adjusted the treatments if necessary.
Rost and colleagues measured
the effect of the two treatment regimes at six-, 12-, 18- and 24-month intervals
during the study. They calculated productivity
from patients’ reports of their effectiveness at work and absenteeism
as the total number of work hours lost due to illness or doctor visits.
Consistently employed patients benefited the most from the enhanced treatment,
making the largest gains in productivity while reducing their rate of absenteeism
and the severity of their depression, the researchers found.
The study was supported by the MacArthur Foundation, the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation and the National Institutes of Mental Health.
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(Disclosure: The Health Behavior News Service is a program of the Center for
the Advancement of Health, which receives funding from the MacArthur Foundation.)
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FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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