Psychiatric screening in primary care: What do patients really want?

被引:16
作者
Lish, JD
Kuzma, MA
Lush, DT
Plescia, G
Farber, NJ
Zimmerman, M
机构
[1] MED COLL PENN & HAHNEMANN UNIV,DEPT PSYCHIAT,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19129
[2] MED COLL PENN & HAHNEMANN UNIV,DIV GEN MED,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19129
[3] VET AFFAIRS MED CTR,DEPT MED,PHILADELPHIA,PA
[4] BROWN UNIV,DEPT PSYCHIAT,PROVIDENCE,RI 02912
关键词
mental disorders; primary care; patient satisfaction; screening;
D O I
10.1016/S0022-3999(96)00235-8
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Psychiatric disorders are common in primary care, but underdiagnosed. U.S. physician reluctance to diagnose psychiatric illnesses is partly attributable to the belief that patients do not want their primary care physician to assess mental health. Six hundred one patients in a U.S. general internal medicine practice completed the SCREENER, a self-report questionnaire which screens for 15 psychiatric disorders, and another questionnaire about the SCREENER. Patients were predominantly female, unmarried, black, high school graduates. Only 3% thought that their physician should never evaluate their mental health. More than 60% desired periodic mental health screening, and one third wanted psychiatric assessment only when a problem was suspected. Attitudes toward questionnaire screening were less positive than toward physician interview. Patients were more likely to want screening if they were female, unmarried, young, had a history of mental health treatment, reported psychiatric symptoms, or were in fair-poor subjective physical or mental health. Copyright (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:167 / 175
页数:9
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