Hanel Gertraud, Henningsen Peter, Herzog Wolfgang, Sauer Nina, Schaefert Rainer, Szecsenyi Joachim, Löwe Bernd
Department of Psychosomatic and General Clinical Medicine, Medical Hospital, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
J Psychosom Res. 2009 Sep;67(3):189-97. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2009.04.013. Epub 2009 Jun 27.
Depression, anxiety, and somatization are the most frequently observed mental disorders in primary health care. Our main objective was to draw on the often neglected general practitioners' (GPs) perspective to investigate what characterizes these three common mental diagnoses with regard to creating more suitable categories in the DSM-V and ICD-11.
We collected independent data from 1751 primary care patients (participation rate=77%) and their 32 treating GPs in Germany. Patients filled out validated patient self-report measures for depression (PHQ-9), somatic symptom severity (PHQ-15), and illness anxiety (Whiteley-7), and questions regarding coping and attribution of illness. GPs' clinical diagnoses and associated features were assessed.
Patients diagnosed by their GPs with depression, anxiety, and/or somatoform disorders were significantly older, less educated, and more often female than the reference group not diagnosed with a mental disorder. They had visited the GP more often, had a longer duration of symptoms, and were more often under social or financial stress. Among the mental disorders diagnosed by the GPs, depression (OR=4.4; 95% CI=2.6 to 7.5) and comorbidity of somatoform, depressive, and anxiety disorders (OR=9.5; 95% CI=4.6 to 19.4) were associated with the largest degrees of impairment compared to the reference group. Patients diagnosed as having a somatoform/functional disorder only had mildly elevated impairment on all dimensions (OR=2.0; 95% CI=1.4 to 2.7). Similar results were found for the physicians' attribution of psychosocial factors for cause and maintenance of the disease, difficult patient-doctor relationship, and self-assessed mental disorder.
In order to make the DSM-V and ICD-11 more suitable for primary care, we propose providing appropriate diagnostic categories for (1) the many mild forms of mental syndromes typically seen in primary care; and (2) the severe forms of comorbidity between somatoform, depressive, and/or anxiety disorder, e.g., with a dimensional approach.
抑郁、焦虑和躯体化是基层医疗中最常观察到的精神障碍。我们的主要目的是借鉴常被忽视的全科医生(GP)的观点,调查这三种常见精神诊断在《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM-V)和《国际疾病分类》第11版(ICD-11)中创建更合适类别方面的特征。
我们收集了来自德国1751名基层医疗患者(参与率=77%)及其32名主治全科医生的独立数据。患者填写了经过验证的抑郁(患者健康问卷-9,PHQ-9)、躯体症状严重程度(患者健康问卷-15,PHQ-15)和疾病焦虑(惠特利7项问卷,Whiteley-7)的患者自我报告量表,以及关于应对和疾病归因的问题。评估了全科医生的临床诊断及相关特征。
与未被诊断患有精神障碍的参照组相比,被全科医生诊断患有抑郁、焦虑和/或躯体形式障碍的患者年龄更大、受教育程度更低,且女性更为常见。他们看全科医生的次数更多,症状持续时间更长,且更常处于社会或经济压力之下。在全科医生诊断的精神障碍中,与参照组相比,抑郁(比值比[OR]=4.4;95%置信区间[CI]=2.6至7.5)以及躯体形式、抑郁和焦虑障碍的共病(OR=9.5;95%CI=4.6至19.4)与最大程度的损害相关。仅被诊断患有躯体形式/功能障碍的患者在所有维度上的损害仅轻度升高(OR=2.0;95%CI=1.4至2.7)。在医生对疾病病因和维持的社会心理因素归因、医患关系困难以及自我评估的精神障碍方面也发现了类似结果。
为使DSM-V和ICD-11更适用于基层医疗,我们建议为以下情况提供适当的诊断类别:(1)基层医疗中常见的许多轻度精神综合征形式;(2)躯体形式、抑郁和/或焦虑障碍之间的严重共病形式,例如采用维度方法。