Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA , USA.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2010 Jul;18(7):586-95. doi: 10.1097/JGP.0b013e3181d145ea.
The aim of this study is to explore primary care physicians' (PCPs) and depression care managers' (DCMs) approaches to diagnosing and treating depression in older men. The authors focus on older men because studies have shown that they are undertreated compared with women and younger groups. The authors contribute to previous research by identifying facilitators of care for older men from the perspective of clinicians.
Participants in this study were part of the Improving Mood-Promoting Access to Collaborative Treatment (IMPACT) trial, an effectiveness study of collaborative care for late-life depression in 18 diverse primary care practices. Nine PCPs and 11 DCMs were interviewed to collect information on specific roles in caring for depressed patients and their experiences in working with depressed older men. All interviews were tape-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed thematically in several steps using standard qualitative data analysis techniques.
: The authors identified three general approaches to building trust and talking about the depression: 1) an indirect approach ("call it something else"), 2) a gradual approach ("building up to depression"), and 3) a direct approach ("shock and awe"). The authors also found specific strategies that PCPs and DCMs used to manage depression among elderly male patients, such as increased monitoring of mood, treating somatic symptoms first, medicalizing depression, and enlisting the cooperation of family. In our interviews, enlisting family involvement was the most prominent strategy used by clinicians.
A variety of approaches and strategies are used by clinicians for diagnosing and treating depressed older men. Clinicians change strategies as a response to a patient's compliance with treatment and the decision about which strategy to pursue is usually made on an "on-the-go" basis throughout the course of clinician-patient interaction. Based on clinicians' experience, depression management requires concerted efforts and persistence, and the family seems to play an important role in how older men receive the diagnosis of depression and adhere to clinicians' prescribed treatment. However, more research is needed to discover the best way of engaging and working with family members to facilitate effective depression care for older adults.
本研究旨在探讨初级保健医生(PCP)和抑郁护理经理(DCM)诊断和治疗老年男性抑郁症的方法。作者关注老年男性,是因为研究表明,与女性和年轻群体相比,他们的治疗不足。作者从临床医生的角度出发,通过确定有利于老年男性的护理措施,为先前的研究做出了贡献。
本研究的参与者是改善情绪促进协作治疗(IMPACT)试验的一部分,这是一项针对 18 个不同初级保健实践中晚期抑郁症的协作护理有效性研究。对 9 名 PCP 和 11 名 DCM 进行了访谈,以收集有关照顾抑郁患者特定角色的信息,以及他们与抑郁老年男性合作的经验。所有访谈均进行了录音、逐字记录,并使用标准的定性数据分析技术分几个步骤进行了主题分析。
作者确定了建立信任和讨论抑郁症的三种一般方法:1)间接方法(“用其他名称称呼它”),2)渐进方法(“逐步解决抑郁症”),3)直接方法(“震撼与敬畏”)。作者还发现了 PCP 和 DCM 用于管理老年男性患者抑郁症的具体策略,例如增加对情绪的监测、首先治疗躯体症状、将抑郁症医学化以及争取家庭的合作。在我们的访谈中,争取家庭参与是临床医生使用的最突出的策略。
临床医生在诊断和治疗老年男性抑郁症时使用了多种方法和策略。临床医生会根据患者对治疗的依从性和关于采用哪种策略的决策来改变策略,而决策通常是在临床医生与患者互动的过程中“随时”做出的。根据临床医生的经验,抑郁症的管理需要协同努力和坚持不懈,家庭似乎在老年男性接受抑郁症诊断和坚持临床医生规定的治疗方面发挥着重要作用。然而,需要进一步研究以发现让家庭成员参与并与之合作的最佳方式,以促进对老年患者的有效抑郁症护理。