17 research outputs found

    Observational studies of depression in primary care: what do we know?

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>We undertook a systematic review of observational studies of depression in primary care to determine 1) the nature and scope of the published studies 2) the methodological quality of the studies; 3) the identified recovery and risk factors for persistent depression and 3) the treatment and health service use patterns among patients.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Searches were conducted in MEDLINE, CINAHL and PsycINFO using combinations of topic and keywords, and Medical Subject Headings in MEDLINE, Headings in CINAHL and descriptors in PsycINFO. Searches were limited to adult populations and articles published in English during 1985–2006.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>40 articles from 17 observational cohort studies were identified, most were undertaken in the US or Europe. Studies varied widely in aims and methods making it difficult to meaningfully compare the results. Methodological limitations were common including: selection bias of patients and physicians; small sample sizes (range 35–108 patients at baseline and 20–59 patients at follow-up); and short follow-up times limiting the extent to which these studies can be used to inform our understanding of recovery and relapse among primary care patients with depression. Risk factors for the persistence of depression identified in this review were: severity and chronicity of the depressive episode, the presence of suicidal thoughts, antidepressant use, poorer self-reported quality of life, lower self-reported social support, experiencing key life events, lower education level and unemployment.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Despite the growing interest in depression being managed as a chronic illness, this review identified only 17 observational studies of depression in primary care, most of which have included small sample sizes and been relatively short-term. Future research should be large enough to investigate risk factors for chronicity and relapse, and should be conducted over a longer time frame.</p

    Lack of association between conversation partners' nonverbal behavior predicts recurrence of depression, independently of personality

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    High neuroticism and low extraversion are related to depression and its recurrence. We investigated whether nonverbal involvement behavior during social interaction is one of the factors via which these relations are effectuated. We measured nonverbal expressions of involvement from videotaped behavior of remitted depressed outpatients (n =101) and their conversation partners, and assessed self-reported neuroticism and extraversion scores. During a 2-year follow-up, we assessed the recurrence of depression. Twenty-eight participants (27.7%) experienced a recurrent episode. Time to recurrence was predicted by neuroticism and extraversion, and also by the degree of association between levels of nonverbal involvement behavior of conversation partners. The behavioral effect did not explain the personality effect. Neuroticism moderated the behavioral effect. The results point to the independent relevance of personality and nonverbal behavior in the long-term course of depressive disorder. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved

    Effects on depression pharmacotherapy of a Dutch general practitioner training program

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    Background: General practitioners' (GPs) ability to recognize, diagnose and treat depression improved significantly after a comprehensive, 20-h training programme. This study aims to evaluate in more detail the effects of the training on GPs' pharmacotherapy of depression and related issues. Methods: A pretest-posttest design was used. Both in the pre- and post-training phase, a sample was drawn from consecutive patients of the 17 participating GPs. In the pre-training phase we identified a sample of 31 cases with an ICD-10 depression who received an antidepressant from their GP. The sample was followed for I year. Outcome measures were: type of antidepressant, dosage, duration and number of target instructions given by the GP. Then we trained the GPs. In the post-training phase, we identified a new sample (n = 47) from their practices and measured the same outcomes. Results: Improvements were seen in choice for modern antidepressant, adequate dosage, adequate duration, and number of target instructions given. Limitations: Observed changes can be due to a period effect, inherent in a pre-post design. Conclusions: A post-academic hands-on training of GPs can improve depression pharmacotherapy according to clinical guidelines with respect to choice of a modern antidepressant, adequate duration and psychoeducation. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved

    Cognitive, physiological, and personality correlates of recurrence of depression

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    Background: The risk of recurrence in depressive disorder is high and increases with the number of episodes. We investigated whether individuals with a history of recurrent depression deviate from individuals with a single episode, as regards risk-related variables in 3 different domains of depression research. Methods: Participants were 102 outpatients with major depressive disorder remitted from an episode (60 recurrent, 42 nonrecurrent). We assessed the perception of emotions from vocal stimuli, 24-h urinary free cortisol, and neuroticism. Results: The recurrent group had higher cortisol levels than the nonrecurrent group, and recurrent women also had a more negative perception than nonrecurrent women. These results were independent of each other, and could also not be accounted for by neuroticism or residual symptoms. Gender differences were found in all 3 domains. Limitations: The cross-sectional design limits the possibility to draw conclusions on the causality of the observed effects. Conclusions: Remitted outpatients with recurrent depression deviate from remitted outpatients with single episode depression as regards physiology and social cognition, in a way that may increase their risk of the development of subsequent episodes. The results may have implications for prophylactic treatment strategies. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    Accuracy of general practitioner's prognosis of the 1-year course of depression and generalised anxiety

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    Background A prognosis serves important functions for the management of common mental disorders in primary care. Aims To establish the accuracy of the general practitioner's (GP) prognosis. Method The agreement between GP prognosis and observed course was determined for 138 cases of ICD-10 depression and 65 of generalised anxiety disorder, identified among consecutive attenders of 18 GPs. Results Modest agreement between GP prognosis and course was found, both for depression (kappa =0.21) and generalised anxiety (kappa =0.11). Better agreement (kappa =0.45 for depression, and kappa =0.33 for generalised anxiety) was observed between the course and predictions from a statistical model based on information potentially available to the GP at the time the prognosis was made. This model assesses attainable performance for GPs. Conclusions General practitioners do a fair job in predicting the 1-year course of depression and generalised anxiety. Even so, their performance falls significantly short of attainable performance. Declaration of interest No conflict of interest. Public funding detailed in Acknowledgements
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