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Background Primary care guidelines recommend general practitioners consider using depression symptom questionnaires as patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) to monitor depression in adults to inform treatment and evaluate management strategies. The PROMDEP randomised controlled trial assessed the use of the Patient Health Questionnaire’s (PHQ-9) effectiveness and cost-effectiveness for monitoring depression. We gathered qualitative evidence on the views and experiences of participating patients and practitioners to inform interpretation of the findings. Aim To explore the views and experiences of patients and practitioners of using the PHQ-9 in the PROMDEP trial of monitoring depression in primary care. Design & setting Nested qualitative study and process evaluation of the trial in primary care in England and Wales. Method Twenty-nine patients and 15 practitioners took part in semi-structured telephone or video interviews. Interview data were analysed using thematic analysis. Results Patients and practitioners both valued the PHQ-9 and reported limitations in its use for monitoring depression. This included its role in improving understanding of depression, impact on consultation and care, and integration within current primary care processes. In the context of the PROMDEP trial, our findings highlight potential reasons for the mixed trial findings, including how resistance in its use in practice may be due to barriers that make it hard for practitioners to integrate the PHQ-9 in consultations. Conclusion Monitoring of depression using PROMs need to be considered within the context of current primary care processes and resources. Further research is warranted to understand how the PHQ-9 can be successfully integrated into consultations.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.3399/bjgpo.2025.0159

Type

Journal article

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

Publication Date

2025-10-08T00:00:00+00:00

Pages

BJGPO.2025.0159 - BJGPO.2025.0159