Stein M B, McQuaid J R, Laffaye C, McCahill M E
Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, USA.
J Fam Pract. 1999 Jul;48(7):514-9.
Social phobia (social anxiety disorder) is a common disorder that is receiving more attention as new treatments become available. Little is known about social phobia as it appears in the primary care setting. The purpose of our study was to determine the prevalence of social phobia in a primary care clinic, the rates of comorbidity with other anxiety and mood disorders, the extent of disability, and patterns of healthcare utilization.
A total of 511 English-speaking adults presenting for routine medical care participated in a 2-stage screening consisting of the administration of a self-report measure for social phobia followed by a structured diagnostic interview. We determined current (1-month) prevalence of social phobia, current comorbid disorders, and we ascertained use of health care in the previous 6 months. We also administered brief functional impairment and disability indices.
A lower-bound estimate of 7.0% of primary care attendees suffered from social phobia as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-Fourth Edition. Comorbidity with major depression (58.3% of cases of social phobia) was extensive, somewhat less so with panic disorder (27.8%) and generalized anxiety disorder (30.6%). Social phobics reported significantly more impairment in all functional domains than primary care patients without mental disorders; this was most pronounced in patients with the generalized subtype of social phobia. Social phobics made greater use of health care resources than patients who were not mentally ill, yet few (<20%) were receiving appropriate psychotropic medications.
Patients with social phobia frequently present to primary care medical settings, and manifest impairment in multiple functional domains. But, on the basis of the low rate of psychotropic prescription, it seems that social phobia is either undiagnosed or felt by physicians to be unlikely to benefit from such treatments. Social phobia is highly comorbid with major depression and with other anxiety disorders in the primary care setting. Attention by family physicians to the presence of depression or panic attacks should signal the need to query patients about possible social phobia.
社交恐惧症(社交焦虑障碍)是一种常见疾病,随着新治疗方法的出现,它受到了更多关注。对于社交恐惧症在基层医疗环境中的表现了解甚少。我们研究的目的是确定基层医疗诊所中社交恐惧症的患病率、与其他焦虑和情绪障碍的共病率、残疾程度以及医疗保健利用模式。
共有511名前来接受常规医疗护理的英语使用者参与了一个两阶段筛查,包括进行一项社交恐惧症的自我报告测量,随后进行结构化诊断访谈。我们确定了社交恐惧症的当前(1个月)患病率、当前共病障碍,并查明了前6个月的医疗保健使用情况。我们还进行了简短的功能损害和残疾指数评估。
根据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册(第四版)》定义,基层医疗就诊者中社交恐惧症的下限估计患病率为7.0%。与重度抑郁症的共病情况广泛(社交恐惧症病例的58.3%),与惊恐障碍(27.8%)和广泛性焦虑障碍(30.6%)的共病情况稍少。社交恐惧症患者在所有功能领域的损害报告均显著多于无精神障碍的基层医疗患者;这在社交恐惧症广泛性亚型患者中最为明显。社交恐惧症患者比非精神疾病患者更多地利用医疗保健资源,但很少(<20%)患者正在接受适当的精神药物治疗。
社交恐惧症患者经常前往基层医疗场所就诊,并在多个功能领域表现出损害。但是,基于精神药物处方率较低的情况,似乎社交恐惧症要么未被诊断出来,要么医生认为不太可能从这类治疗中获益。在基层医疗环境中,社交恐惧症与重度抑郁症以及其他焦虑障碍高度共病。家庭医生对抑郁症或惊恐发作的关注应提示有必要询问患者是否可能患有社交恐惧症。