Institute of General Medicine, University of Lausanne, Rue du Bugnon 44, Lausanne 1011, Switzerland.
BMC Psychiatry. 2012 Aug 20;12:120. doi: 10.1186/1471-244X-12-120.
Mental disorders, common in primary care, are often associated with physical complaints. While exposure to psychosocial stressors and development or presence of principal mental disorders (i.e. depression, anxiety and somatoform disorders defined as multisomatoforme disorders) is commonly correlated, temporal association remains unproven. The study explores the onset of such disorders after exposure to psychosocial stressors in a cohort of primary care patients with at least one physical symptom.
The cohort study SODA (SOmatization, Depression and Anxiety) was conducted by 21 private-practice GPs and three fellow physicians in a Swiss academic primary care centre. GPs included patients via randomized daily identifiers. Depression, anxiety or somatoform disorders were identified by the full Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ), a validated procedure to identify mental disorders based on DSM-IV criteria. The PHQ was also used to investigate exposure to psychosocial stressors (before the index consultation and during follow up) and the onset of principal mental disorders after one year of follow up.
From November 2004 to July 2005, 1020 patients were screened for inclusion. 627 were eligible and 482 completed the PHQ one year later and were included in the analysis (77%). At one year, prevalence of principal mental disorders was 30/153 (19.6% CI95% 13.6; 26.8) for those initially exposed to a major psychosocial stressor and 26/329 (7.9% CI95% 5.2; 11.4) for those not. Stronger association exists between psychosocial stressors and depression (RR = 2.4) or anxiety (RR = 3.5) than multisomatoforme disorders (RR = 1.8). Patients who are "bothered a lot" (subjective distress) by a stressor are therefore 2.5 times (CI95% 1.5; 4.0) more likely to experience a mental disorder at one year. A history of psychiatric comorbidities or psychological treatment was not a confounding factor for developing a principal mental disorder after exposure to psychosocial stressors.
This primary care study shows that patients with physical complaints exposed to psychosocial stressors had a higher risk for developing mental disorders one year later. This temporal association opens the field for further research in preventive care for mental diseases in primary care patients.
在初级保健中常见的精神障碍通常与身体主诉有关。虽然接触心理社会应激源以及主要精神障碍(即抑郁症、焦虑症和躯体形式障碍定义为多种躯体形式障碍)的发展或存在通常相关,但时间关联仍未得到证实。本研究探讨了在有至少一种躯体症状的初级保健患者队列中,接触心理社会应激源后这些障碍的发病情况。
该队列研究 SODA(躯体化、抑郁和焦虑)由 21 名私人执业全科医生和三名研究员在瑞士学术初级保健中心进行。全科医生通过随机每日标识符纳入患者。通过完整的患者健康问卷(PHQ)识别抑郁、焦虑或躯体形式障碍,这是一种基于 DSM-IV 标准识别精神障碍的经过验证的程序。PHQ 还用于调查接触心理社会应激源(在指数就诊前和随访期间)以及在随访 1 年后主要精神障碍的发病情况。
从 2004 年 11 月至 2005 年 7 月,对 1020 名患者进行了纳入筛选。627 名符合条件,482 名在 1 年后完成了 PHQ 并纳入分析(77%)。在 1 年时,最初接触主要心理社会应激源的患者中主要精神障碍的患病率为 30/153(95%CI95%13.6;26.8),而未接触的患者为 26/329(7.9%CI95%5.2;11.4)。心理社会应激源与抑郁(RR=2.4)或焦虑(RR=3.5)的关联强于多种躯体形式障碍(RR=1.8)。因此,受应激源“困扰很多”(主观痛苦)的患者在 1 年内患精神障碍的风险增加 2.5 倍(CI95%1.5;4.0)。精神科合并症或心理治疗史不是接触心理社会应激源后发生主要精神障碍的混杂因素。
这项初级保健研究表明,有躯体主诉的患者接触心理社会应激源后,一年后患精神障碍的风险更高。这种时间关联为初级保健患者的精神疾病预防保健提供了进一步研究的机会。