Garcia Maria E, Hinton Ladson, Gregorich Steven E, Livaudais-Toman Jennifer, Kaplan Celia P, Feldman Mitchell, Karliner Leah
Center for Aging in Diverse Communities, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
Multiethnic Health Equity Research Center, Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
Health Equity. 2021 Apr 26;5(1):236-244. doi: 10.1089/heq.2020.0104. eCollection 2021.
Asian and Latinx individuals have a high burden of untreated depression. Under-recognition of depressive symptoms may contribute to existing disparities in depression treatment. The objective of this cross-sectional study was to determine whether physicians recognize and treat depressive symptoms for Chinese and Latinx patients during routine primary care visits. We analyzed data from 1171 Chinese and Latinx patients who were interviewed within 1 week after a primary care visit in a large academic practice, which had not yet implemented universal depression screening. We included participants with depressive symptoms (defined as a Patient Health Questionaire-2 score ≥3) and no prior history of depression (=118). We investigated whether patients perceived having a mental health need in the prior year and conducted chart reviews to assess provider recognition of depressive symptoms, defined as documentation of symptoms, antidepressant initiation, or mental health referral within 30 days of the visit. We further examined differences by race/ethnicity and language preference. Among the 118 patients with depressive symptoms and no prior depression diagnosis (mean age 68), 71 (61%) reported a mental health need in the prior 12 months; however, providers recognized depressive symptoms in only 8/118 patients (7%). The number of patients with recognized symptoms was small across race/ethnicity and language preference groups and we found no significant differences. Physicians recognized and documented depressive symptoms for 1 in 10 Chinese and Latinx patients during routine primary care visits. Targeted efforts are needed to address under-recognition of symptoms and improve depression care for these populations.
亚洲人和拉丁裔个体承受着未治疗抑郁症的沉重负担。对抑郁症状的认识不足可能导致抑郁症治疗中现有的差异。这项横断面研究的目的是确定医生在常规初级保健就诊期间是否认识到并治疗中国和拉丁裔患者的抑郁症状。我们分析了来自1171名中国和拉丁裔患者的数据,这些患者在一家大型学术机构进行初级保健就诊后1周内接受了访谈,该机构尚未实施普遍的抑郁症筛查。我们纳入了有抑郁症状(定义为患者健康问卷-2得分≥3)且无抑郁症既往史的参与者(n = 118)。我们调查了患者在前一年是否认为有心理健康需求,并进行了病历审查,以评估医生对抑郁症状的认识,抑郁症状定义为在就诊后30天内记录症状、开始使用抗抑郁药或进行心理健康转诊。我们进一步按种族/族裔和语言偏好检查差异。在118名有抑郁症状且无抑郁症既往诊断的患者(平均年龄68岁)中,71名(61%)报告在前12个月有心理健康需求;然而,医生仅在8/118名患者(7%)中认识到抑郁症状。在不同种族/族裔和语言偏好组中,被认识到症状的患者数量很少,我们未发现显著差异。在常规初级保健就诊期间,医生在十分之一的中国和拉丁裔患者中认识到并记录了抑郁症状。需要有针对性地努力解决对症状认识不足的问题,并改善这些人群的抑郁症护理。