Smith G C, Clarke D M, Handrinos D, Dunsis A
Monash University, Department of Psychological Medicine, Melbourne, Australia.
Psychosomatics. 1998 May-Jun;39(3):244-52. doi: 10.1016/S0033-3182(98)71341-6.
Prospective data on 1,360 consecutive inpatients referred to the consultation-liaison psychiatry service of 2 metropolitan general teaching hospitals and diagnoses as having a Depressive Illness Spectrum Disorder were collected by using the MICRO-CARES clinical database system. The distribution of DSM-III-R diagnoses was major depression (MD) 49%; dysthymia (DYS) 15%; organic or substance-induced mood disorder or depressive disorder not otherwise specified (ORG/NOS) 14%; and adjustment disorder with depressed mood (AD) 29%s. Antidepressants were prescribed in 59% of the MD cases, 40% of the DYS cases, 36% of the ORG/NOS cases, and 17% of the AD cases. In confirmed MD, antidepressants were prescribed in 69%, and significantly more often in those who were older, female, had a prior history of physical illness, had a neoplasm or a disorder of the nervous or musculoskeletal systems, had higher Axis IV scores, or were referred because of pain or terminal illness. The patients with confirmed MD prescribed antidepressants had a longer length of stay and were referred later than those not prescribed antidepressants. The results illustrate the importance of all the forms of depression in consultation-liaison psychiatry and the vigor with which all forms are treated.