The prevalence of diagnosable psychiatric conditions in any given year
is vast - up to 30 percent of the population, in some recent studies.
Current health services research suggests that half or more of those
who seek help for these conditions look in the general medical sector.
Primary care settings and the general medical sector constitute a maj
or part of the official, but defacto, system of care for people with b
rain-based disorders. How well this defacto system works, and how to m
ake it work better, is a matter of considerable importance. Can primar
y care physicians - as opposed to mental health clinicians - treat dep
ression, anxiety and other mental health problems effectively? Even if
they can, do they have enough time to provide these services in their
high-pressure, fast-paced practices? Three frontline experts respond
to this critical question: a noted HMO psychiatrist who is implementin
g depression treatment programs in primary care clinics, a consumer ad
vocate for the federal Center for Mental Health Services, and an ''int
ernist's internist'' who helped create the DSM-IV for primary care, ar
ticulate how those on the receiving end of the system need to be part
of the planning for these services.