Treatment of depressive patients in general practice: The effects of a short training course in the practice orientation of general practitioners

Citation
J. Kiuttu et al., Treatment of depressive patients in general practice: The effects of a short training course in the practice orientation of general practitioners, NORD J PSY, 53(5), 1999, pp. 347-352
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry
Journal title
NORDIC JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
ISSN journal
08039488 → ACNP
Volume
53
Issue
5
Year of publication
1999
Pages
347 - 352
Database
ISI
SICI code
0803-9488(1999)53:5<347:TODPIG>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
The objective of this study was to assess the changes after a short trainin g course in the practice orientation of general practitioners (GPs) in diag nosing and treating patients with depression. A controlled intervention stu dy design was used, with pre- and post-intervention measurements. The inter vention was conducted in four health care centers in Finland. One health ca re center functioned as the control. The intervention was a 3-day training course, targeted at all the staff of the intervention health care centers. It included lectures on depression and practice in small groups, focusing e specially on patient-caregiver relationships and interaction. Both in the i ntervention and in the control health care centers all patients were screen ed for depression during 1 week before and 4 months after the training. The agreement on the patients' depressive status was measured by comparing the patients' Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) scores with the GPs' assessments . Practice orientation was evaluated from descriptions given by the treatin g GPs. In the intervention health care centers 18% (210 of 1154) of the pat ients in the pretest phase and 17% (132 of 799) in the posttest phase were indicated as depressed by the BDI. Contrary to expectations, the GPs' origi nally low sensitivity (in comparison with the BDI) in detecting depression decreased even somewhat more after the training course (17.1%/11.4%). Howev er, the practice changed slightly from being symptom-oriented toward being patient- or even family-oriented in the intervention health care centers.