Title of article :
Disability and the detection of mental disorder in primary care
Author/Authors :
Sunny Collings، نويسنده , , The MaGPIe Research Group، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Introduction Despite the importance of
disability associated with common mental disorders,
research on the detection of mental disorders in primary
care has scarcely explored its relevance. Aims To
describe the disability burden of primary care patients
with common mental disorders and subthreshold disorders
and to examine the association between general
practitioner (GP) recognition of mental disorder and
disability. Design Cross-sectional survey of GPs and
their patients. Setting General practices in the lower
North Island of New Zealand. Method Participants
were randomly selected: GPs (n=70) and their patients
(n=3414, of whom a subset of 775 from the basis of this
paper). Formal DSM-IV diagnoses were made with the
Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI),
and psychosomatic and psychological symptoms were
measured with the Somatic and Psychological Health
Report. Disability was measured with the World Health
Organisation’s Disability Assessment Schedule-version
II. GPs independently rated the severity of psychological
symptoms and the presence or absence of disorder.
Results The principal findings were (1) that disability
was associated with both mental disorder and subthreshold
disorder with no significant difference in
the level of disability between these categories, and
(2) that GPs were less sensitive to the presence of
mental disorders as defined by the CIDI if there was
little concomitant disability, and in subthreshold cases,
the presence of disability increased the chance of GPs
identifying clinically significant symptoms. Conclusion
Studies of GP recognition of mental disorder have
almost exclusively adopted the perspective of concepts
of disorder as defined by psychiatry. This study provides
some insight into the way GPs attend to both
symptoms and functioning in their assessments of
psychological syndromes. Disability is an important
cue to recognition of mental health problems in the
primary care setting, including those that are not recognised
by standardised psychiatric assessment but
which may still be relevant to patient suffering
Keywords :
primary health care – mentaldisorders – disability
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)