Escobar Javier I, Gara Michael A, Diaz-Martinez Angelica M, Interian Alejandro, Warman Melissa, Allen Lesley A, Woolfolk Robert L, Jahn Eric, Rodgers Denise
Department of Psychiatry, UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ 08854-5635, USA.
Ann Fam Med. 2007 Jul-Aug;5(4):328-35. doi: 10.1370/afm.702.
Patients seeking care for medically unexplained physical symptoms pose a major challenge at primary care sites, and there are very few well-accepted and properly evaluated interventions to manage such patients.
We tested the effectiveness of a cognitive behavior therapy (CBT)-type intervention delivered in primary care for patients with medically unexplained physical symptoms. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either the intervention plus a consultation letter or usual clinical care plus a consultation letter. Physical and psychiatric symptoms were assessed at baseline, at the end of treatment, and at a 6-month follow-up. All treatments and assessments took place at the same primary care clinic where patients sought care.
A significantly greater proportion of patients in the intervention group had physical symptoms rated by clinicians as "very much improved" or "much improved" compared with those in the usual care group (60% vs 25.8%; odds ratio = 4.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.9-8.8; P<.001). The intervention's effect on unexplained physical symptoms was greatest at treatment completion, led to relief of symptoms in more than one-half of the patients, and persisted months after the intervention, although its effectiveness gradually diminished. The intervention also led to significant improvements in patient-reported levels of physical symptoms, patient-rated severity of physical symptoms, and clinician-rated depression, but these effects were no longer noticeable at follow-up.
This time-limited, CBT-type intervention significantly ameliorated unexplained physical complaints of patients seen in primary care and offers an alternative for managing these common and problematic complaints in primary care settings.
因医学上无法解释的身体症状而寻求治疗的患者给基层医疗场所带来了重大挑战,而且几乎没有被广泛接受且经过适当评估的干预措施来管理这类患者。
我们测试了在基层医疗中为有医学上无法解释的身体症状的患者提供的一种认知行为疗法(CBT)类型干预的有效性。患者被随机分配接受干预加一封咨询信或常规临床护理加一封咨询信。在基线、治疗结束时和6个月随访时评估身体和精神症状。所有治疗和评估均在患者寻求治疗的同一基层医疗诊所进行。
与常规护理组相比,干预组中临床医生评定身体症状为“非常改善”或“大有改善”的患者比例显著更高(60%对25.8%;优势比 = 4.1;95%置信区间,1.9 - 8.8;P <.001)。干预对无法解释的身体症状的影响在治疗完成时最大,使一半以上的患者症状得到缓解,并且在干预后持续数月,尽管其效果逐渐减弱。该干预还使患者报告的身体症状水平、患者评定的身体症状严重程度以及临床医生评定的抑郁症状有显著改善,但这些效果在随访时不再明显。
这种限时的CBT类型干预显著改善了基层医疗中患者无法解释的身体不适,并为在基层医疗环境中管理这些常见且棘手的不适提供了一种替代方法。