Volume 46 | Number 6pt1 | December 2011

Abstract List

Steven C. Martino Ph.D., Marc N. Elliott, David E. Kanouse, Donna O. Farley, Q. Burkhart M.S., Ron D. Hays


Objectives

To compare health care experiences of Medicare beneficiaries with and without symptoms of depression and investigate the role of patient confidence in shaping these experiences.


Data Sources

Data came from the 2009 CAHPS Medicare 4.0 Fee‐for‐Service (FFS) Survey, which was fielded to a national probability sample of 298,492 FFS Medicare beneficiaries.


Study Design

Linear regression was used to model associations of depression with four global ratings and three composite measures of health care and to test whether beneficiaries' confidence in their ability to recognize the need for care mediates these associations.


Principal Findings

Beneficiaries with depressive symptoms reported worse experiences with care across the full range of patient experience covered by the CAHPS survey. Depressive symptoms were associated with decreased patient confidence and decreased confidence was in turn associated with poorer reports of care.


Conclusions

Our study highlights depressive symptoms as a risk factor for poorer experiences of health care and highlights depressed patients' confidence in recognizing their need for care and for designing programs to improve the health care of this population.