Primary care patients with mental health problems: outcome of a randomised clinical trial

B Schreuders, Harm Van Marwijk, J Smit, F Rijmen, W Stalman, Oppen P Van

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND: The prevalence of patients with mental health problems in general practice is high, and at least one-third of these problems last for 6 months or longer. Patients with these problems take up more time during a consultation and attend more frequently. AIM: This study investigated the effectiveness of problem-solving treatment for primary care patients with mental health problems. The hypothesis was that patients receiving problem-solving treatment from a nurse would have fewer symptoms after 3 months, or a lower attendance rate, compared with patients receiving the usual care from the GP. DESIGN OF THE STUDY: Randomised clinical trial. SETTING: Twelve general practices in Amsterdam and 12 nurses from a mental healthcare institution. METHOD: A sample of patients aged >or=18 years were screened for mental health problems with the general health questionnaire (GHQ-12) in the waiting room of the general practices, and were randomised. Patients receiving the problem-solving treatment were required to complete four to six treatment sessions, while patients in the control group were treated as usual by the GP. RESULTS: No significant difference was found between the groups in terms of improved psychopathology or a decrease in attendance rate. Post-hoc analyses showed a sub-group of patients with more severe pathology who may benefit from problem-solving treatment. CONCLUSION: The main results show that problem-solving treatment provided by a nurse adds little to the usual care from the GP for frequent attenders with mental health problems. Post-hoc analyses show that there may be a sub-group of more severely depressed patients who could benefit from problem-solving treatment
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)886-891
    Number of pages6
    JournalBr.J.Gen.Pract.
    Volume57
    Issue number0960-1643 (Print)
    Publication statusPublished - Nov 2007

    Keywords

    • Aged
    • Anxiety Disorders
    • Depressive Disorder
    • Family Practice
    • Female
    • GENERAL-PRACTICE
    • General Practice
    • Health
    • Humans
    • Male
    • Mental Health
    • Middle Aged
    • Multicenter Studies
    • Netherlands
    • Nurses
    • PRIMARY-CARE
    • Patient Care Team
    • Patients
    • Prevalence
    • Problem Solving
    • Psychiatric Nursing
    • Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
    • Research
    • Time Factors
    • Treatment Outcome
    • pathology
    • primary care
    • therapy

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