Ross S, Moffat K, McConnachie A, Gordon J, Wilson P
Department of General Practice, University of Glasgow, Woodside Health Centre.
Br J Gen Pract. 1999 Jan;49(438):17-21.
The management and detection of depression varies widely, and the causes of variation are incompletely understood.
To describe and explain general practitioners' (GPs') current practice in the recognition and management of depression in young adults, their attitudes towards depression, and to investigate associations of GP characteristics and patient sex with management.
All GP principals in the Greater Glasgow Health Board were randomized to receive questionnaires with vignettes describing increasingly severe symptoms of depression in either male or female patients, and asked to indicate which clinical options they would be likely to take. The Depression Attitude Questionnaire was used to elicit GP attitudes.
As the severity of vignette symptoms increased, GPs responded by changing their prescribing and referral patterns. For the most severe vignette, the majority of GPs would prescribe drugs (76.4%) and refer the patient for further help (73.7%). Male and female patients were treated differently: GPs were less likely to ask female patients than male patients to attend a follow-up consultation (odds ratio [OR] = 0.55), and female GPs were less likely to refer female patients (OR = 0.33). GPs with a pessimistic view of depression, measured using the 'inevitable course of depression' attitude scale, were less willing to be actively involved in its treatment, being less likely to discuss a non-physical cause of symptoms (OR = 0.77) or to explore social factors in moderately severe cases (OR = 0.68).
Accepting the limitations of the method, GPs appear to respond appropriately to increasingly severe symptoms of depression, although variation in management exists. Educational programmes should be developed with the aim of enhancing GP attitudes towards depression, and the effects on detection and management of depression should be rigorously evaluated.
抑郁症的管理和检测差异很大,而造成这种差异的原因尚未完全明了。
描述并解释全科医生(GP)目前在识别和管理青年抑郁症方面的做法、他们对抑郁症的态度,并调查全科医生特征及患者性别与管理方式之间的关联。
大格拉斯哥健康委员会的所有全科医生负责人被随机分配,收到附有描述男性或女性患者抑郁症症状逐渐加重的病例 vignettes 的问卷,并被要求指出他们可能采取的临床选择。使用抑郁症态度问卷来了解全科医生的态度。
随着病例 vignettes 症状严重程度的增加,全科医生通过改变他们的处方和转诊模式做出反应。对于最严重的病例 vignette,大多数全科医生会开药(76.4%)并将患者转诊以获得进一步帮助(73.7%)。男性和女性患者的治疗方式不同:与男性患者相比,全科医生让女性患者参加后续咨询的可能性较小(优势比[OR]=0.55),女性全科医生转诊女性患者的可能性较小(OR=0.33)。使用“抑郁症不可避免病程”态度量表衡量,对抑郁症持悲观看法的全科医生不太愿意积极参与其治疗,讨论症状非身体原因的可能性较小(OR=0.77),或在中度严重病例中探索社会因素的可能性较小(OR=0.68)。
尽管方法存在局限性,但全科医生似乎对日益严重的抑郁症症状做出了适当反应,尽管管理方式存在差异。应制定教育计划,以增强全科医生对抑郁症的态度,并应严格评估其对抑郁症检测和管理的影响。