Mojtabai Ramin, Olfson Mark
Department of Psychiatry, Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2008 Aug;65(8):962-70. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.65.8.962.
In addition to prescribing medications, providing psychotherapy has long been a defining characteristic of the practice of clinical psychiatry. However, there are indications that the role of psychiatrists in providing psychotherapy may have diminished in recent years.
To examine recent national trends in the provision of psychotherapy by office-based psychiatrists.
Data from the 1996 through 2005 cross-sectional National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey were analyzed to examine trends in psychotherapy provision within nationally representative samples of visits to office-based psychiatrists. Multivariate analyses examined the time trend, adjusting for patient, visit, and setting characteristics. Practice-level analyses examined time trends in the percentage of psychiatrists who provided psychotherapy to all, some, or none of their patients during a typical week.
Office-based psychiatry practices in the United States.
Patients with psychiatric diagnoses visiting outpatient psychiatrists.
Provision of psychotherapy in visits longer than 30 minutes.
Psychotherapy was provided in 5597 of 14,108 visits (34.0% [weighted]) sampled during a 10-year period. The percentage of visits involving psychotherapy declined from 44.4% in 1996-1997 to 28.9% in 2004-2005 (P < .001). This decline coincided with changes in reimbursement, increases in managed care, and growth in the prescription of medications. At the practice level, the decrease in providing psychotherapy corresponded with a decline in the number of psychiatrists who provided psychotherapy to all of their patients from 19.1% in 1996-1997 to 10.8% in 2004-2005 (P = .001). Psychiatrists who provided psychotherapy to all of their patients relied more extensively on self-pay patients, had fewer managed-care visits, and prescribed medications in fewer of their visits compared with psychiatrists who provided psychotherapy less often.
There has been a recent significant decline in the provision of psychotherapy by psychiatrists in the United States. This trend is attributable to a decrease in the number of psychiatrists specializing in psychotherapy and a corresponding increase in those specializing in pharmacotherapy--changes that were likely motivated by financial incentives and growth in psychopharmacological treatments in recent years.
除了开药之外,提供心理治疗长期以来一直是临床精神病学实践的一个决定性特征。然而,有迹象表明,近年来精神科医生在提供心理治疗方面的作用可能有所减弱。
研究以办公室为基础的精神科医生提供心理治疗的近期全国趋势。
分析1996年至2005年横断面全国门诊医疗护理调查的数据,以研究在具有全国代表性的就诊于以办公室为基础的精神科医生的样本中提供心理治疗的趋势。多变量分析研究了时间趋势,并对患者、就诊和环境特征进行了调整。实践层面的分析研究了在典型一周内为所有、部分或没有患者提供心理治疗的精神科医生比例的时间趋势。
美国以办公室为基础的精神病学实践。
就诊于门诊精神科医生的患有精神疾病诊断的患者。
在时长超过30分钟的就诊中提供心理治疗。
在10年期间抽取的14108次就诊中,有5597次(加权后为34.0%)提供了心理治疗。涉及心理治疗的就诊比例从1996 - 1997年的44.4%下降到2004 - 2005年的28.9%(P <.001)。这种下降与报销政策的变化、管理式医疗的增加以及药物处方的增长同时出现。在实践层面,提供心理治疗的减少与为所有患者提供心理治疗的精神科医生数量从1996 - 1997年的19.1%下降到2004 - 2005年的10.8%相对应(P =.001)。与较少提供心理治疗的精神科医生相比,为所有患者提供心理治疗的精神科医生更多地依赖自费患者,管理式医疗就诊较少,且在就诊中开药较少。
美国精神科医生提供心理治疗的情况近期有显著下降。这一趋势归因于专门从事心理治疗的精神科医生数量减少,以及专门从事药物治疗的精神科医生数量相应增加——这些变化可能是由近年来的经济激励措施和精神药理学治疗的发展所推动的。