E
Elizabeth H.B. Lin
Researcher at Group Health Cooperative
Publications - 7
Citations - 1331
Elizabeth H.B. Lin is an academic researcher from Group Health Cooperative. The author has contributed to research in topics: Depression (differential diagnoses) & Public health. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications receiving 1274 citations. Previous affiliations of Elizabeth H.B. Lin include University of Washington.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Effectiveness of Depression Care Management on Diabetes-Related Outcomes in Older Patients
John W Williams,Wayne Katon,Elizabeth H.B. Lin,Polly H. Noël,Jason Worchel,John E. Cornell,Linda H. Harpole,Bridget A. Fultz,Enid M. Hunkeler,Virginia S. Mika,Jürgen Unützer +10 more
TL;DR: 12 months of depression care management for depressed patients with diabetes improved depression-related outcomes and increased the frequency of exercise, but care management did not affect diet, diabetes medication adherence, glucose testing, or glycemic control.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cost-Effectiveness and Net Benefit of Enhanced Treatment of Depression for Older Adults With Diabetes and Depression
Wayne Katon,Jürgen Unützer,Ming Yu Fan,John W Williams,Michael Schoenbaum,Elizabeth H.B. Lin,Enid M. Hunkeler +6 more
TL;DR: The IMPACT intervention is a high-value investment for older adults with diabetes; it is associated with high clinical benefits at no greater cost than usual care.
Journal ArticleDOI
Depression and diabetes symptom burden
Evette J. Ludman,Wayne Katon,Joan Russo,Michael Von Korff,Gregory E. Simon,Paul Ciechanowski,Elizabeth H.B. Lin,Terry Bush,Edward A. Walker,Bessie A. Young +9 more
TL;DR: The depression-diabetes symptom association is stronger than the association of diabetes symptoms with measures of glycemic control and diabetes complications.
Journal ArticleDOI
Diabetes complications and depression as predictors of health service costs
Gregory E. Simon,Gregory E. Simon,Wayne Katon,Elizabeth H.B. Lin,Elizabeth H.B. Lin,Evette J. Ludman,Evette J. Ludman,Michael VonKorff,Paul Ciechanowski,Bessie A. Young,Bessie A. Young +10 more
TL;DR: Among people with diabetes, depression is associated with 50-75% increases in health service costs, and this proportional difference is similar to that in general population samples, but the absolute dollar difference is much greater.
Journal ArticleDOI
Long-term effects on medical costs of improving depression outcomes in patients with depression and diabetes.
Wayne Katon,Joan Russo,Michael Von Korff,Elizabeth H.B. Lin,Evette J. Ludman,Paul Ciechanowski +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the 5-year effects on total health care costs of the Pathways depression intervention program for patients with diabetes and comorbid depression compared with usual primary care.