Improving outcomes in depression
- 27 October 2001
- Vol. 323 (7319) , 948-949
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.323.7319.948
Abstract
Around 450 million people worldwide have mental or psychosocial problems, but most of those who turn to health services for help will not be correctly diagnosed or will not get the right treatment.1 Even those whose problems are recognised may not receive adequate care. In a World Health Organization study of psychological disorders in general health care carried out in 14 countries around the world patients with major depression were as likely to be treated with sedatives as with antidepressants, although antidepressants were associated with more favourable outcomes at three month follow up. This benefit had dissipated by follow up at 12 months; but patients had only been taking drug treatment for a mean of 11 weeks, with a quarter of them doing so for less than a month.2 About two thirds of patients whose illnesses were recognised and treated with drugs still had a diagnosis of mental illness at follow up one year later, and in nearly a half the diagnosis was still major depression. Indeed, there are …Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cost-Effectiveness of a Collaborative Care Program for Primary Care Patients With Persistent DepressionAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 2001
- Cost-effectiveness of Practice-Initiated Quality Improvement for DepressionJAMA, 2001
- Rethinking practitioner roles in chronic illness: the specialist, primary care physician, and the practice nurseGeneral Hospital Psychiatry, 2001
- Cost-effectiveness of Systematic Depression Treatment for High Utilizers of General Medical CareArchives of General Psychiatry, 2001
- Synchrony of Change in Depression and DisabilityArchives of General Psychiatry, 2000
- Individualized stepped care of chronic illnessWestern Journal of Medicine, 2000
- Effects of a clinical-practice guideline and practice-based education on detection and outcome of depression in primary care: Hampshire Depression Project randomised controlled trialThe Lancet, 2000
- The effects of detection and treatment on the outcome of major depression in primary care: a naturalistic study in 15 cities.1998
- Treatment Costs, Cost Offset, and Cost-Effectiveness of Collaborative Management of DepressionPsychosomatic Medicine, 1998
- Treating Major Depression in Primary Care PracticeArchives of General Psychiatry, 1996