Rost K, Nutting P, Smith J, Coyne J C, Cooper-Patrick L, Rubenstein L
Centers for Mental Healthcare Research, Department of Psychiatry, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, USA.
Arch Fam Med. 2000 Feb;9(2):150-4. doi: 10.1001/archfami.9.2.150.
To examine whether competing demands explain the appearance of inadequate primary care depression treatment observed at a single visit.
A cross-sectional patient survey.
Two hundred forty patients with 5 or more symptoms of depression seeing 12 physicians in 6 primary care practices, representing 77.4% of the depressed patients identified through 2-stage screening of more than 11,000 primary care attenders.
In patients with elevated depressive symptoms, discussing depression as a possible diagnosis in untreated patients, and changing depression management in treated patients.
Physicians and patients discussed depression in 46 (47.9%) of 96 untreated patients; physicians changed depression treatment recommendations in 87 (60.4%) of 144 treated patients with current symptoms. Chronic physical comorbidity decreased the odds that physicians and untreated patients discussed depression as a possible diagnosis (odds ratio = 0.66, P = .01). New problems decreased the odds that treatment recommendations would be changed in treated patients who remained depressed (odds ratio = 0.39, P = .05). Physicians and untreated patients were more likely to discuss depression as a possible diagnosis if patients reported antidepressant medication was acceptable (odds ratio = 4.57, P = .01) and less likely to discuss depression if patients reported specialty care counseling was acceptable (odds ratio = 0.33, P = .05).
The attention depression gets during a given medical visit is less associated with the severity of the patient's depressive symptoms than with the number or recency of other problems the patient has. If competing demands provide ongoing barriers to depression treatment, interventions will be needed to assure that patients with chronic physical problems receive high-quality mental health care in the primary care setting.
探讨相互竞争的需求是否能解释单次就诊时初级保健中抑郁症治疗不充分的现象。
横断面患者调查。
240名有5种或更多抑郁症状的患者,他们在6家初级保健机构就诊于12名医生,这些患者占通过对超过11,000名初级保健就诊者进行两阶段筛查所识别出的抑郁症患者的77.4%。
在抑郁症状加重的患者中,在未治疗患者中讨论抑郁症作为可能的诊断,以及在已治疗患者中改变抑郁症管理。
在96名未治疗患者中,医生和患者讨论抑郁症的有46名(47.9%);在144名有当前症状的已治疗患者中,医生改变抑郁症治疗建议的有87名(60.4%)。慢性躯体合并症降低了医生与未治疗患者讨论抑郁症作为可能诊断的几率(优势比 = 0.66,P = 0.01)。新出现的问题降低了仍有抑郁症状的已治疗患者治疗建议被改变的几率(优势比 = 0.39,P = 0.05)。如果患者报告抗抑郁药物可接受,医生和未治疗患者更有可能讨论抑郁症作为可能的诊断(优势比 = 4.57,P = 0.01);如果患者报告专科护理咨询可接受,则讨论抑郁症的可能性较小(优势比 = 0.33,P = 0.05)。
在一次特定就诊期间对抑郁症的关注,与患者抑郁症状的严重程度相比,更多地与患者其他问题的数量或近期情况相关。如果相互竞争的需求持续阻碍抑郁症治疗,就需要采取干预措施,以确保患有慢性躯体问题的患者在初级保健环境中获得高质量的心理健康护理。