Freeling P, Rao B M, Paykel E S, Sireling L I, Burton R H
Br Med J (Clin Res Ed). 1985 Jun 22;290(6485):1880-3.
Patients attending their general practitioner were screened and a group with unrecognised major depressive disorder identified. This group was interviewed and the findings compared with those in a group of patients recognised correctly as depressed by their general practitioners. Half of the patients with severe depression screened in their doctors' waiting rooms went unrecognised, and they differed in few ways from those who were recognised. The differences found were that the patients with unrecognised depression were less obviously depressed and their illness had lasted longer. Physical illness was present in nearly 30% of patients in the unrecognised group, and the depression seemed related to it. Patients with unrecognised depression were more likely to have feelings other than those of normal sadness and more likely to respond with change of mood to intercurrent events. These data suggest that patients might benefit if general practitioners were better trained to recognise depression, although it is not known whether treatment would be effective.
对看全科医生的患者进行了筛查,确定了一组患有未被识别的重度抑郁症的患者。对该组患者进行了访谈,并将结果与被全科医生正确识别为抑郁症患者的一组患者的结果进行了比较。在医生候诊室筛查出的重度抑郁症患者中有一半未被识别,他们与被识别出的患者在很少方面存在差异。发现的差异是,未被识别的抑郁症患者抑郁症状不太明显,且患病时间更长。未被识别组中近30%的患者患有躯体疾病,抑郁症似乎与之相关。未被识别的抑郁症患者除了有正常悲伤情绪外,更可能有其他情绪,并且更可能因并发事件而情绪发生变化。这些数据表明,如果全科医生接受更好的培训以识别抑郁症,患者可能会受益,尽管尚不清楚治疗是否有效。