Collaboration Blog | Depression Care in Minnesota: We can’t let another year go by.

April 1, 2020

by: Deb Krause, Vice President for Minnesota Health Action Group; and Liz Cinqueonce, Chief Operating Officer for MN Community Measurement

MN Community Measurement (MNCM) recently released the   2019 Health Care Quality Report. We want to highlight the good news, the troubling news, and the opportunity — with a special focus on mental health and health care in Minnesota.

First, the good news.  

  • We have a level of transparency about health care quality in Minnesota that other states only aspire to have. The Quality Report is published annually, illuminating trends overall and providing valuable access to quality data at a clinic level. This transparency helps care systems, clinics and health plans understand and improve performance. It also helps individuals (patients and family members seeking care) to make informed choices and seek care from top-performing providers.
  • The most recent report highlights one very positive trend for mental health care: Adolescent mental health and/or depression screening has increased from 39.9% of patients in 2015 to 86.1% of patients in 2019. In this time of escalating concern about the mental health of our youth, this is tremendous news. We applaud the clinics that have updated their workflows to improve patient care. Screening to identify those in need of mental health care is an important first step to getting them the care they deserve.

But, the troubling news.

  • Depression remission at 6 months remains “stuck” at a particularly low level — just 8.2% in 2019, compared to 8.0% in 2016. This measures the percentage of patients diagnosed with depression by their primary care providers, who received follow-up and were reassessed at 6 months, and have improved sufficiently to be considered in remission. Mental health conditions are treatable and there are examples of providers in our communities achieving outcomes far above the average. This is what we want for all patients — that they receive good, timely care and get better. But it isn’t happening for most Minnesotans with depression.
  • For some other depression measures there was a statistically significant rate increase in the 2019 report, but it falls far short of the outcomes our community expects to achieve. For example, depression remission at 12 months was 7.5% in 2019, up from 6.9% in 2018. Despite the higher rates, the results remain troubling and there is a large opportunity for improvement.
  • Finally, there continues to be a considerable gap in performance for mental health outcome measures relative to physical health outcome measures for conditions such as diabetes, cardiovascular or asthma care.

And now, the opportunity.

Given the plateau in depression remission, we offer these words of wisdom from Henry Ford:

“If you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you’ve always got.”

​–​ Henry Ford

Here are examples of constructive action:

  • MNCM’s Board of Directors recently identified improving depression remission as one of its priorities for partnering with others to drive improvement. This will prioritize actions to enhance data reporting, support research to understand barriers, and work with the community to advance solutions. 
  • The Action Group is conducting important research during 2020 to identify best practices of high-performing clinics with respect to depression remission as part of a prestigious Eugene B. Washington Community Engagement Award from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI). The research will identify best clinical practices and other significant factors associated with clinic performance scores on the depression remission measure. Disseminating the research findings will help providers and their patients in Minnesota and beyond. 
  • The Path Forward is uniting employers, leading nonprofits, and other stakeholders in Minnesota and across the nation to execute a disciplined, private sector approach to systematically and measurably improve five established best practices of mental health and substance use care.

Measurement is the starting place. Improvement is necessary. Results are the goal.

All stakeholders have a role to play — health plans, care systems and clinics, providers, nonprofits, coalitions, and employers. Let’s hold ourselves accountable for aligning efforts to drive meaningful improvement in depression remission. We can’t let another year go by.

“Without continual growth and progress, such words as improvement, achievement and success have no meaning. “

​–​ Benjamin Franklin

Liz and Deb

Liz Cinqueonce
Chief Operating Officer
MN Community Measurement

Deb Krause
Vice President
Minnesota Health Action Group


Posted in Blog

Recent Posts

By Liz Cinqueonce, MBA October 30, 2025
By Liz Cinqueonce, MBAPresident & CEO of MNCM At MN Community Measurement (MNCM), we believe that the most meaningful progress in health care comes when the community is at the center—when those closest to the work and most affected by outcomes help shape the path forward. Building on this foundation, we are making interoperability a… The post Community at the Helm: Interoperability as a Priority for Minnesota’s Health Data appeared first on MN Community Measurement.
By Jess Donovan, MPH, BSN October 21, 2025
This October marks the 40th anniversary of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. According to the American Cancer Society, about 1 in 8 women will be diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in their lifetime. Fortunately, however, early detection through screening and advances in treatment have decreased mortality by 44% since 1989. Screening can catch cancer early, when it is… The post Empowered by Data: Uncovering Screening Disparities and Reducing Breast Cancer Risk appeared first on MN Community Measurement.
By Jess Donovan, MPH, BSN September 30, 2025
September is Sexual Health Awareness Month. As we close out September, we’re highlighting two of the measures we report on – Cervical Cancer Screening and Chlamydia Screening in Women.   Cervical cancer, once one of the most common cancers affecting women in the United States, has significantly decreased since the 1970s. The reason for the decline… The post Empowered by Data: Spotlight on Screening for Sexual Health appeared first on MN Community Measurement.
By Liz Cinqueonce, MBA September 25, 2025
"It feels like.." The post Elevating Local Voices: Insights from MNCM’s Regional Community Conversations appeared first on MN Community Measurement.
By Jess Donovan, MPH, BSN August 20, 2025
By Jess Donovan, MPH, Clinical Measurement Analyst, MN Community Measurement; and Steven Inman, MD, Medical Director, Children’s Health Network August is National Immunization Awareness Month. Vaccines are a safe and effective way to protect both individuals and communities from serious and preventable illnesses like measles, tetanus, diphtheria, and influenza. However, the health of the community… The post Empowered by Data: Uncovering Immunization Gaps in Children and Adolescents appeared first on MN Community Measurement.

Recent Comments

Archives

Categories