Group therapy in a general practice setting for frequent attenders: a controlled study of mothers with pre-school children.
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Vol. 38 (317) , 539-41
Abstract
The frequent attendance of women suffering from anxiety and depression is a common problem in general practice and the problems are often externalized through the women's children. A small controlled study was carried out in a general practice surgery to see whether demand for medical attention by mothers of pre-school children would decrease after they attended a discussion group. Twenty women who fulfilled the study criteria of more than double the national average consultation rate for their age group and of having at least one pre-school child, were sequentially allocated to a treatment or control group. The group therapy was held over two terms of 10 sessions, each of 90 minutes, and was led by a psychologist and a general practitioner. Consultation rates (including surgery visits, house calls and prescription requests) were recorded for five consecutive six-month periods before and after the intervention. At follow-up six months after the end of the treatment a significant reduction in consultation rate had been achieved and maintained by the treated group compared with the controls (P<0.01). This study shows the value of attending to the cause of frequent consultation as well as to the complaints presented.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stomachaches and Headaches in a Community Sample of Preschool ChildrenPediatrics, 1987
- Group treatment of general practice anxiety problems.1986
- Frequent attenders in general practice: medical, psychological and social characteristics.1985
- Clinical psychologist in primary care: controlled clinical and economic evaluation.BMJ, 1984
- Skills not pills: learning to cope with anxiety symptoms.1984
- A parenting group in general practice.1981
- Family trends in psychotropic and antibiotic prescribing in general practice.BMJ, 1980
- A New Personal Disturbance Scale (DSSI/sAD)British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1976
- Prevalence of symptoms of urinary tract infection in women.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1969
- A Self-Rating Depression ScaleArchives of General Psychiatry, 1965