Munoz-Arroyo Rosalia, Sutton Matt, Morrison Jill
Information Services Division, NHS National Services Scotland, Edinburgh.
Br J Gen Pract. 2006 Jun;56(527):423-8.
Antidepressant prescribing in general practice has dramatically increased since the beginning of the last decade.
To determine if the increase in antidepressants prescribed in Scotland between 1995 and 2001 was due to increase in incidence, prevalence, care-seeking behaviour by patients, or identification by GPs of depression.
Secondary analysis of routine data. Prescribing information was obtained from Information and Statistics Division Scotland, psychosocial morbidity from the Scottish Health Surveys of 1995 and 1998 and GP consultations from the continuous morbidity recording (CMR) dataset. Annual trends in antidepressant prescribing for prescriptions, gross ingredient cost and defined daily doses (DDDs) were examined for all Scottish Practices and 54 stable CMR practices (175 955 patients). Prevalence of psychological morbidity in responders with a General Health Questionnaire score > or = 4, their contact probability and contact frequency was compared in the 1995 and 1998 Scottish Health Surveys. Changes in diagnostic and GP consultation patterns in CMR practices were compared.
Total prescriptions for antidepressants increased from 1.5 million in 1995-1996 to 2.8. million in 2000-2001. The gross ingredient cost increased from pounds 20 to pounds 44 million and total DDDs from 44.5 to 93.2 million. Prescription trends in CMR practices were similar. Overall prevalence of psychological morbidity was the same in the 1995 and 1998 Scottish Health Surveys. Percentage of consultations in CMR practices for new diagnoses of depression decreased from 1.7 to 1.3%, the depression-related contact rate decreased and annual prevalence rates for depressive illness were stable between 1998-1999 and 2000-2001.
There is no evidence of an increase in incidence, prevalence, care-seeking behaviour or identification of depression during the period of a sharp increase in antidepressant prescribing. Further work is required to explain the increase.
自上世纪九十年代初以来,全科医疗中抗抑郁药的处方量急剧增加。
确定1995年至2001年间苏格兰抗抑郁药处方量的增加是由于发病率上升、患病率上升、患者寻求治疗行为增加,还是全科医生对抑郁症的识别增加。
对常规数据进行二次分析。处方信息来自苏格兰信息与统计局,心理社会发病率数据来自1995年和1998年的苏格兰健康调查,全科医生咨询数据来自连续发病率记录(CMR)数据集。研究了苏格兰所有医疗机构以及54个稳定的CMR医疗机构(175955名患者)抗抑郁药处方的年度趋势,包括处方数量、总成分成本和限定日剂量(DDD)。比较了1995年和1998年苏格兰健康调查中一般健康问卷得分≥4的受访者的心理发病率、他们的接触概率和接触频率。比较了CMR医疗机构中诊断和全科医生咨询模式的变化。
抗抑郁药的总处方量从1995 - 1996年的150万增加到2000 - 2001年的280万。总成分成本从2000万英镑增加到4400万英镑,总DDD从4450万增加到9320万。CMR医疗机构的处方趋势相似。1995年和1998年苏格兰健康调查中心理发病率的总体患病率相同。CMR医疗机构中抑郁症新诊断的咨询百分比从1.7%降至1.3%,与抑郁症相关的接触率下降,1998 - 1999年至2000 - 2001年期间抑郁症的年度患病率稳定。
在抗抑郁药处方量急剧增加期间,没有证据表明抑郁症的发病率、患病率、寻求治疗行为或识别率有所增加。需要进一步开展工作来解释这种增加。