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Dive into the research topics where Erin M. Miller is active.

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Featured researches published by Erin M. Miller.


Medical Care | 2010

Initiation of Primary Care-Mental Health Integration Programs in the VA Health System: Associations With Psychiatric Diagnoses in Primary Care

Paul N. Pfeiffer; Benjamin R. Szymanski; Marcia Valenstein; Edward P. Post; Erin M. Miller; John F. McCarthy

Background:Providing collaborative mental health treatment within primary care settings improves depression outcomes and may improve detection of mental disorders. Few studies have assessed the effect of collaborative mental health treatment programs on diagnosis of mental disorders in primary care populations. In 2008, many Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities implemented collaborative care programs, as part of the VAs Primary Care–Mental Health Integration (PC-MHI) program. Objectives:To assess the prevalence of diagnosed mental health conditions among primary care patient populations in association with PC-MHI programs, overall and for patient subpopulations that may be less likely to receive mental health treatment. Research Design:Using a difference-in-differences analysis, we evaluated whether the rates of psychiatric diagnoses among primary care patient populations at 294 VA facilities changed from fiscal year (FY)07 to FY08, and whether trends differed at facilities with PC-MHI encounters in FY08. Subgroup analyses examined whether trends differed by patient age and race/ethnicity. Subjects, Measures, and Results:From FY07 to FY08, the prevalence of diagnosed depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, and alcohol abuse increased more in the 137 facilities with PC-MHI program encounters than in the 157 facilities without these encounters. Increases were more likely among patients who were younger (18–64) and white. Conclusions:Initiation of PC-MHI programs was associated with elevated diagnosis patterns, which may enhance recognition of mental health needs among primary care patients. Increases in diagnosis prevalence were not uniform across patient subgroups. Further research is needed on treatment processes and outcomes for individuals receiving services in PC-MHI programs.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2010

Depression Among Older Adults in the United States and England

David J. Llewellyn; Iain A. Lang; Sandeep Vijan; Mohammed U. Kabeto; Erin M. Miller; Kenneth M. Langa

CONTEXT Depression negatively affects health and well being among older adults, but there have been no nationally representative comparisons of depression prevalence among older adults in England and the United States. OBJECTIVE The authors sought to compare depressive symptoms among older adults in these countries and identify sociodemographic and clinical correlates of depression in these countries. DESIGN AND SETTING The authors assessed depressive symptoms in non-Hispanic whites aged 65 years and older in 2002 in two nationally representative, population-based studies: the U.S. Health and Retirement Study and English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. PARTICIPANTS A total of 8,295 Health and Retirement Study respondents and 5,208 English Longitudinal Study of Ageing respondents. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The authors measured depressive symptoms using the eight-item Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. The authors determined whether depressive symptom differences between the United States and England were associated with sociodemographic characteristics, chronic health conditions, and health behaviors. RESULTS Significant depressive symptoms (Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale score ≥4) were more prevalent in English than U.S. adults (17.6% versus 14.6%, adjusted Wald test F([1, 1593]) = 11.4, p < 0.001). Adjusted rates of depressive symptoms in England were 19% higher compared with the United States (odds ratio: 1.19, 95% confidence interval: 1.01-1.40). U.S. adults had higher levels of education, and net worth, but lower levels of activities of daily living/instrumental activities of daily living impairments, tobacco use, and cognitive impairment, which may have contributed to relatively lower levels of depressive symptoms in the United States. CONCLUSIONS Older adults in the United States had lower rates of depressive symptoms than their English counterparts despite having more chronic health conditions. Future cross-national studies should identify how depression treatment influences outcomes in these populations.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2010

Urokinase plasminogen activator independent early experimental thrombus resolution: MMP2 as an alternative mechanism

Vikram Sood; Cathy Luke; Kristopher B. Deatrick; Joseph F. Baldwin; Erin M. Miller; Megan Elfline; Gilbert R. Upchurch; Thomas W. Wakefield; Peter K. Henke

Deep-vein thrombosis (DVT) resolution is thought to be primarily a urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) -dependent mechanism, although observations suggest other non-fibrinolytic mechanisms may exist. We explored the role of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) -2 and -9 in early DVT resolution in uPA-deficient mice. Male B6/SVEV (WT) and genetically matched uPA -/- mice underwent inferior vena cava (IVC) ligation to create stasis venous thrombi, with IVC and thrombus harvest. Thrombus size was similar between WT and uPA -/- mice at day 4, suggesting early non uPA-dependent resolution. Intrathrombus neutrophils and monocytes were reduced 3- and 3.5-fold in uPA -/- mice as compared with WT. By ELISA, tumour necrosis factor α and interleukin 1β were not altered, while interferon (IFN)γ was significantly elevated in uPA -/- mice. A compensatory increase in thrombus tPA was not observed, plasmin activity was reduced and PAI-1 was elevated 2.5-fold in uPA -/- mice. Active MMP2, but not MMP9, was elevated 3-fold in uPA -/- mice as compared with WT as well as MMP-14, an MMP2 activator. Collagen type IV and fibrinogen were reduced in uPA -/- mice thrombi as compared with WT. IFNγ induces MMP2, and blockade of IFNγ was associated with larger venous thrombi and reduced active MMP2, as compared with WT. Consistently, MMP2 -/- mice had larger VT as compared with WT controls, despite normal thrombus plasmin levels. Taken together, early experimental venous thrombus resolution is independent of uPA, and, in part, inflammatory cell influx. MMP2-dependent thrombolysis is an important compensatory mechanism of venous thrombus resolution, possibly by collagen type IV metabolism, and may represent an exploitable therapeutic avenue.


Military Medicine | 2012

Peers and Peer-Based Interventions in Supporting Reintegration and Mental Health Among National Guard Soldiers: A Qualitative Study

Paul N. Pfeiffer; Adrian J. Blow; Erin M. Miller; Jane Forman; Gregory W. Dalack; Marcia Valenstein

National Guard soldiers experience high levels of mental health symptoms following deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan, yet many do not seek treatment. We interviewed 30 National Guard soldiers with prior deployments to Iraq or Afghanistan to assess mental health treatment barriers and the role of peers in treatment engagement. Interview transcripts were analyzed by a multidisciplinary research team using techniques drawn from grounded theory. The following themes were identified: (1) personal acceptance of having a mental health problem rather than treatment access is the major barrier to treatment entry; (2) tightly connected, supportive peer networks can decrease stigma related to mental health problems and encourage treatment; however, soldiers in impoverished or conflicted peer networks are less likely to receive these benefits; and (3) soldiers are generally positive about the idea of peer-based programs to improve treatment engagement, although they note the importance of leadership support, peer assignment, and unit specialty in implementing these programs. We conclude that some, but not all, naturally occurring peer networks serve to overcome stigma and encourage mental health treatment seeking by soldiers. Formal peer-based programs may assist soldiers not sufficiently benefitting from natural peer networks, although there are barriers to implementation.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2015

Associations between depression and all-cause and cause-specific risk of death: a retrospective cohort study in the Veterans Health Administration

Matheos Yosef; Erin M. Miller; Marcia Valenstein; Sonia A. Duffy; Helen C. Kales; Sandeep Vijan; H. Myra Kim

OBJECTIVE Depression may be associated with increased mortality risk, but there are substantial limitations to existing studies assessing this relationship. We sought to overcome limitations of existing studies by conducting a large, national, longitudinal study to assess the impact of depression on all-cause and cause-specific risk of death. METHODS We used Cox regression models to estimate hazard ratios associated with baseline depression diagnosis (N=849,474) and three-year mortality among 5,078,082 patients treated in Veterans Health Administration (VHA) settings in fiscal year (FY) 2006. Cause of death was obtained from the National Death Index (NDI). RESULTS Baseline depression was associated with 17% greater hazard of all-cause three-year mortality (95% CI hazard ratio [HR]: 1.15, 1.18) after adjusting for baseline patient demographic and clinical characteristics and VHA facility characteristics. Depression was associated with a higher hazard of three-year mortality from heart disease, respiratory illness, cerebrovascular disease, accidents, diabetes, nephritis, influenza, Alzheimers disease, septicemia, suicide, Parkinsons disease, and hypertension. Depression was associated with a lower hazard of death from malignant neoplasm and liver disease. Depression was not associated with mortality due to assault. CONCLUSIONS In addition to being associated with suicide and injury-related causes of death, depression is associated with increased risk of death from nearly all major medical causes, independent of multiple major risk factors. Findings highlight the need to better understand and prevent mortality seen with multiple medical disorders associated with depression.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2010

Vein wall remodeling after deep vein thrombosis: differential effects of low molecular weight heparin and doxycycline.

Vikram Sood; Cathy Luke; Erin M. Miller; Mayo Mitsuya; Gilbert R. Upchurch; Thomas W. Wakefield; D.D. Myers; Peter K. Henke

BACKGROUND Venous thrombus resolution sets up an early intense inflammatory reaction, from which vein wall damage results. Tissue response to injury includes matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activation and extracellular matrix protein turnover. This study sought to determine the effect of exogenous MMP inhibition and its potential attenuation of early vein wall injury. METHODS Rats received treatment beginning 24 hr after a stasis venous thrombosis by near occlusive ligation and until harvest at day 7. Three groups were evaluated: (1) vehicle saline controls (NaCl), (2) low molecular weight heparin (LMWH; Lovenox, 3 mg/kg daily SQ), and (3) doxycycline (DOXY, 30 mg/kg daily PO). Thrombus size (mg/mm), levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) and D-dimer by colorimetric assay, and monocytes counts by immunohistochemistry were assessed. Vein wall assessment included stiffness by tensiometry, interleukin 1beta (IL-1 beta protein levels by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, MMP2 and -9 by zymography, and histological analysis of intimal thickness (IT). Comparisons were by t-test to control. p < 0.05 was considered significant. RESULTS Thrombus sizes were similar at days 2 and 7 for all three groups, while thrombus TNFalpha was increased in 2-day LMWH- and DOXY-treated groups (NaCl = 1.0 +/- 0.8, LWMH = 9 +/- 3, DOXY = 27 +/- 5 pg/mg protein, n = 6-8, p < 0.05) and at 7 days in the DOXY group (NaCl = 3.0 +/- 2.5, DOXY = 23 +/- 4.2 pg/mg protein, n = 5, p < 0.05). Vein wall stiffness at 7 days was less with LMWH treatment, but not with DOXY, compared to controls (NaCl = 0.33 +/- 0.05, LMWH = 0.17 +/- 0.03, DOXY = 0.43 +/- 0.09 N/mm, n = 5-7, p < 0.05). Vessel-wall IL-1 beta was reduced only in the DOXY group at 7 days (NaCl = 26 +/- 3, LMWH = 38 +/- 17, DOXY = 6 +/- 3 pg/mg protein, n = 4-6, p < 0.05), as was the IT score versus controls (NaCl = 2.2 +/- 0.6, LMWH =1.7 +/- 0.3, DOXY = 0.8 +/- 0.20, n = 4-6, p < 0.05). Zymographic MMP9 activity was significantly reduced at 2 days in the LMWH and DOXY groups (NaCl = 85 +/- 24, LMWH = 23 +/- 7( *), DOXY = 13 +/- 5 U/mg protein, n = 6-8, p < 0.05). MMP2 zymographic activity, thrombus monocyte cell counts, and D-dimer activity were not significantly different across groups. CONCLUSION Treatment with LMWH or DOXY did not alter the size of deep vein thrombosis, mildly altered thrombus composition, and differentially affected vein wall injury, despite similar reductions in early MMP9 activity. Whether exogenous MMP inhibition affects long-term vein wall fibrosis will require further study.


Psychiatric Services | 2012

Early Mortality and Years of Potential Life Lost Among Veterans Affairs Patients With Depression

Mark A. Ilgen; Paul N. Pfeiffer; Deborah E. Welsh; John F. McCarthy; Marcia Valenstein; Erin M. Miller; Khairul Islam; Helen C. Kales

OBJECTIVE Substantial literature documents excess and early mortality among individuals with serious mental illness, but there are relatively few data about mortality and depression. METHODS During fiscal year 2007, data from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the National Death Index were used to calculate mean age of death and years of potential life lost (YPLL) associated with 13 causes of death among veterans with (N=701,659) or without (N=4,245,193) depression. RESULTS Compared with nondepressed patients, depressed patients died younger (71.1 versus 75.9) and had more YPLL (13.4 versus 10.2) as a result of both natural and unnatural causes. Depending on the cause of death, depressed patients died between 2.5 and 8.7 years earlier and had 1.5 to 6.1 YPLL compared with nondepressed patients. CONCLUSIONS These findings have important implications for clinical practice, given that improved quality of care may be needed to reduce early mortality among depressed VA patients.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2011

Electroconvulsive therapy for major depression within the Veterans Health Administration

Paul N. Pfeiffer; Marcia Valenstein; Katherine J. Hoggatt; Dara Ganoczy; Dan Maixner; Erin M. Miller

OBJECTIVES Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is the most effective treatment for severe or treatment resistant depression; however, the lack of widely accepted methods for determining when ECT is indicated may contribute to disparities and variation in use. We examined receipt of ECT among depressed patients in the largest coordinated health system in the US, the Veterans Health Administration. METHODS Using administrative data, we conducted a multivariable logistic regression to identify individual clinical and sociodemographic predictors of receiving ECT, including variables of geographic accessibility to ECT, among patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder between 1999 and 2004. RESULTS 307 (0.16%) of 187,811 patients diagnosed with major depression received ECT during the study period. Black patients were less likely to receive ECT than whites (odds ratio 0.33; 95% confidence interval: 0.20, 0.55), and patients living in the South (OR: 0.71; 95% CI: 0.53, 0.95) or West (OR: 0.59; 95% CI: 0.42, 0.82) were less likely to receive ECT than patients living in the central US. Patients whose closest VA facility provided ECT had a higher likelihood of receiving ECT (OR: 3.02; 95% CI: 2.22, 4.10). Depressed patients with no major medical comorbidities were also more likely to receive ECT (OR: 2.42; 95% CI: 1.65, 3.55). LIMITATIONS Findings are not adjusted for depression severity. CONCLUSIONS ECT use for major depression was relatively uncommon. Race, US region, geographic accessibility, and general medical health were all associated with whether or not patients received ECT. Clinicians and health systems should work to provide equitable access and more consistent use of this safe and effective treatment.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2016

Employment status, employment functioning, and barriers to employment among VA primary care patients

Matheos Yosef; Debra Siegel Levine; Kristen M. Abraham; Erin M. Miller; Jennifer Henry; C. Beau Nelson; Paul N. Pfeiffer; Rebecca K. Sripada; Molly Harrod; Marcia Valenstein

BACKGROUND Prior research found lower employment rates among working-aged patients who use the VA than among non-Veterans or Veterans who do not use the VA, with the lowest reported employment rates among VA patients with mental disorders. This study assessed employment status, employment functioning, and barriers to employment among VA patients treated in primary care settings, and examined how depression and anxiety were associated with these outcomes. METHODS The sample included 287 VA patients treated in primary care in a large Midwestern VA Medical Center. Bivariate and multivariable analyses were conducted examining associations between socio-demographic and clinical predictors of six employment domains, including: employment status, job search self-efficacy, work performance, concerns about job loss among employed Veterans, and employment barriers and likelihood of job seeking among not employed Veterans. RESULTS 54% of respondents were employed, 36% were not employed, and 10% were economically inactive. In adjusted analyses, participants with depression or anxiety (43%) were less likely to be employed, had lower job search self-efficacy, had lower levels of work performance, and reported more employment barriers. Depression and anxiety were not associated with perceived likelihood of job loss among employed or likelihood of job seeking among not employed. LIMITATIONS Single VA primary care clinic; cross-sectional study. DISCUSSION Employment rates are low among working-aged VA primary care patients, particularly those with mental health conditions. Offering primary care interventions to patients that address mental health issues, job search self-efficacy, and work performance may be important in improving health, work, and economic outcomes.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 2012

Relationships between mood and employment over time among depressed VA primary care patients

Duncan G. Campbell; Andrew B. Lanto; Edmund F. Chaney; Cory Bolkan; Laura M. Bonner; Erin M. Miller; Marcia Valenstein; Thomas J. Waltz; Lisa V. Rubenstein

OBJECTIVE Associations between depression, productivity and work loss have been reported, yet few studies have examined relationships between longitudinal depression status and employment continuity. We assessed these relationships among Veterans of conventional working ages. METHODS We used longitudinal survey data from Veterans receiving primary care in 1 of 10 Veterans Health Administration primary care practices in five states. Our sample included 516 participants with nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) scores indicating probable major depression (PHQ-9≥10) at baseline and who completed either the 7-month follow-up survey or follow-up surveys at both 7 and 18 months postbaseline. We examined relationships between depression persistence and employment status using multinomial logistic regression models. RESULTS Although general employment rates remained stable (21%-23%), improved depression status was associated with an increased likelihood of becoming employed over 7 months among those who were both depressed and nonemployed at baseline. Improvements in depression status starting at 7 months and continuing through 18 months were associated with remaining employed over the 18-month period, relative to those who were depressed throughout the same time frame. CONCLUSIONS Given the pressing need to prevent socioeconomic deterioration in the increasing population of conventional working-aged Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom Veterans, further attention to the depression/employment relationship is urgently needed.

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Cathy Luke

University of Michigan

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Vikram Sood

University of Michigan

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