Rondet Claire, Parizot Isabelle, Cadwallader Jean Sebastien, Lebas Jacques, Chauvin Pierre
INSERM, UMR_S 1136, Pierre Louis Institute of Epidemiology and Public Health, Department of Social Epidemiology, F-75013, Paris, France.
Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR_S 1136, F-75013, Paris, France.
BMC Fam Pract. 2015 May 8;16:57. doi: 10.1186/s12875-015-0273-2.
The prevalence of depression in the general population is 5 to 10% but can exceed 50% in the most socially vulnerable populations. The perceptions of this disease are widely described in the literature, but no research has been carried out in France to explain the reasons for not consulting a general practitioner during a depressive episode, particularly in people in the most precarious situations. The objective of this study was to describe the reasons for not seeking primary care during a depressive episode in a socially vulnerable population.
An exploratory sequential design with a preliminary qualitative study using a phenomenological approach. Subsequently, themes that emerged from the qualitative analysis were used in a questionnaire administered in a cross-sectional observational study at a free outpatient clinic in Paris in 2010. Lastly, a logistic regression analysis was performed.
The qualitative analysis revealed four aspects that explain the non-consulting of a general practitioner during a depressive episode: the negative perception of treatment, the negative perception of the disease, the importance of the social environment, and the doctor-patient relationship. The quantitative analysis showed that close to 60% of the patients who visited the free clinic were depressed and that only half of them had talked with a care provider. The results of the statistical analysis are in line with those of the qualitative analysis, since the most common reasons for not seeing a general practitioner were the negative perception of the disease (especially among the men and foreigners) and its treatments (more often among the men and French nationals).
Close to 50% of the depressed individuals did not seek primary care during a depressive episode, and close to 80% of them would have liked their mental health to be discussed more often by a health professional. Better information on depression and its treatments, and more-systematic screening by primary care personnel would improve the treatment of depressed patients, especially those in the most precarious situations.
普通人群中抑郁症的患病率为5%至10%,但在社会最弱势群体中可能超过50%。文献中对这种疾病的认知有广泛描述,但法国尚未开展研究来解释在抑郁发作期间不咨询全科医生的原因,尤其是在处于最不稳定状况的人群中。本研究的目的是描述社会弱势群体在抑郁发作期间不寻求初级保健的原因。
采用探索性序列设计,先用现象学方法进行初步定性研究。随后,将定性分析中出现的主题用于2010年在巴黎一家免费门诊进行的横断面观察研究中所使用的问卷。最后进行逻辑回归分析。
定性分析揭示了四个方面,解释了在抑郁发作期间不咨询全科医生的原因:对治疗的负面认知、对疾病的负面认知、社会环境的重要性以及医患关系。定量分析表明,到免费诊所就诊的患者中近60%患有抑郁症,其中只有一半与医护人员交谈过。统计分析结果与定性分析结果一致,因为不看全科医生的最常见原因是对疾病(尤其是男性和外国人)及其治疗(男性和法国国民中更常见)的负面认知。
近50%的抑郁症患者在抑郁发作期间未寻求初级保健,其中近80%的人希望健康专业人员能更频繁地讨论他们的心理健康问题。更好地宣传抑郁症及其治疗方法,以及初级保健人员进行更系统的筛查,将改善抑郁症患者的治疗,尤其是那些处于最不稳定状况的患者。