Background <p>Depression remains underdiagnosed in primary care, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Despite advocacy for mental health integration into primary care, evidence on practical implementation strategies in diverse international settings is limited. This study evaluated the feasibility of implementing practice-driven systematic depression screening among adult patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) across primary care practices in four countries.</p> Methods <p>The Major Depressive Disorder Management in Primary Care (MDD Minds) initiative implemented a 12-week quality improvement pilot across nine primary care practices in Brazil, Japan, Kenya, and Nigeria. Practices received local coaching, educational resources, and adaptable workflow tools to screen adult patients with DM for depression during routine care visits. Data on screening rates, depression identification, and resource provision were collected using standardized forms.</p> Results <p>Among 1,592 adult patients with diabetes seen during the 12-week implementation period, 582 (36.6%) were newly screened for depression. Practices without baseline depression documentation identified depression in 54.9% of screened patients, compared to 12.2% in practices with existing documentation, demonstrating substantial under-detection in settings without systematic screening. Of those screened, 105 (18.0%) had positive screens indicating depressive symptoms. An additional 211 patients (13.3%) had prior documented depression diagnoses. In total, 326 patients (19.6%) were diagnosed with depressive symptoms.</p> Conclusions <p>This multi-country implementation study demonstrates that systematic depression screening integrated into routine diabetes care is feasible across diverse primary care settings when supported by adaptable workflows and structured coaching. Findings highlight the importance of local ownership and context-specific implementation strategies for integrating mental health screening into chronic disease management in global primary care.</p>

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Implementing systematic depression screening in primary care: lessons from the MDD Minds global quality improvement pilot

  • Mary Ales,
  • Christopher Dowrick,
  • Adekunle Ariba,
  • Joy Mugambi,
  • André Luis B. Tavares,
  • Ryuki Kassai,
  • Christos Lionis,
  • Shelly Rodrigues

摘要

Background

Depression remains underdiagnosed in primary care, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Despite advocacy for mental health integration into primary care, evidence on practical implementation strategies in diverse international settings is limited. This study evaluated the feasibility of implementing practice-driven systematic depression screening among adult patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) across primary care practices in four countries.

Methods

The Major Depressive Disorder Management in Primary Care (MDD Minds) initiative implemented a 12-week quality improvement pilot across nine primary care practices in Brazil, Japan, Kenya, and Nigeria. Practices received local coaching, educational resources, and adaptable workflow tools to screen adult patients with DM for depression during routine care visits. Data on screening rates, depression identification, and resource provision were collected using standardized forms.

Results

Among 1,592 adult patients with diabetes seen during the 12-week implementation period, 582 (36.6%) were newly screened for depression. Practices without baseline depression documentation identified depression in 54.9% of screened patients, compared to 12.2% in practices with existing documentation, demonstrating substantial under-detection in settings without systematic screening. Of those screened, 105 (18.0%) had positive screens indicating depressive symptoms. An additional 211 patients (13.3%) had prior documented depression diagnoses. In total, 326 patients (19.6%) were diagnosed with depressive symptoms.

Conclusions

This multi-country implementation study demonstrates that systematic depression screening integrated into routine diabetes care is feasible across diverse primary care settings when supported by adaptable workflows and structured coaching. Findings highlight the importance of local ownership and context-specific implementation strategies for integrating mental health screening into chronic disease management in global primary care.