Author
Listed:
- Eva Rothermund
- Reinhold Kilian
- Edit Rottler
- Dorothea Mayer
- Michael Hölzer
- Monika A Rieger
- Harald Gündel
Abstract
Objective: Common mental disorders like mood and anxiety disorders and somatoform disorders have high costs, yet under-treatment is still frequent. Many people with common mental disorders are employed, so the workplace is potentially a suitable context in which to provide early treatment. Our study investigates whether a change of setting (workplace versus standard care) improves access to treatment for common mental disorders. Methods: Conditional latent profile analysis was applied to identify user profiles for work ability (WAI), clinical symptoms like depression (patient health questionnaire depression, PHQ-9), health-related quality of life (QoL, SF-12), and work-related stress (Maslach Burnout Inventory, irritation scale). Patients were recruited consecutively, via psychotherapeutic consultation in the workplace (n = 174) or psychotherapeutic consultation in outpatient care (n = 193). Results: We identified four user profiles in our model: ‘severe’ (n = 99), ‘moderate I—low QoL’ (n = 88), ‘moderate II—low work ability’ (n = 83), and ‘at risk’ (n = 97). The ‘at risk’ profile encompassed individuals with reduced work ability (36.0, 34.73 to 37.37), only mild clinical symptoms (PHQ-9 5.7, 4.92 to 6.53), no signs of work-related stress and good quality of life. A higher proportion of the ‘at risk’ group than of the ‘severe’ group sought help via the psychotherapeutic consultation in the workplace (OR 0.287, P
Suggested Citation
Eva Rothermund & Reinhold Kilian & Edit Rottler & Dorothea Mayer & Michael Hölzer & Monika A Rieger & Harald Gündel, 2017.
"Improving Access to Mental Health Care by Delivering Psychotherapeutic Care in the Workplace: A Cross-Sectional Exploratory Trial,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(1), pages 1-16, January.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0169559
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169559
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