Psychiatry and medicine

Author(s):  
Philip Cowen ◽  
Paul Harrison ◽  
Tom Burns

Chapter 15 considers the relevance of psychiatry to the rest of medical practice. It should be read in conjunction with the other chapters in this book, especially Chapters 8 and 13. It covers mind-body dualism, epidemiology and presentation in medical settings, comorbidity, management of psychiatric disorders in the medically ill, unexplained somatic symptoms, somatoform and dissociative disorders, psychiatric services in medical settings, psychiatric aspects of medical procedures and conditions, and psychiatric aspects of obstetrics and gynaecology.

2000 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 227-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven A. Kvaal ◽  
Shobhana Patodia

The Positive and Negative Affect Scale (PANAS), a brief measure of Positive and Negative Affect, may be useful in assessing mood of medical patients because it does not include somatic items frequently confounded with medical conditions. In previous research Positive and Negative Affect have been independent and uncorrelated, and Negative Affect but not Positive Affect has been positively correlated with somatic symptoms. However, relationships between variables may vary in different populations, and there is relatively little information on Positive and Negative Affect in medical patients. In the current study, the PANAS was used to assess the relationships among Positive Affect, Negative Affect, and somatic symptoms and pain in a medically ill hospital population. Positive and Negative Affect scores were positively correlated and for patients reporting pain, Positive Affect scores were positively correlated with pain intensity. Results from this and other studies indicate that Positive and Negative Affect are independent but in some populations may be correlated; positive affects such as hopefulness may co-occur with both somatic complaints and psychological distress.


2009 ◽  
Vol 195 (5) ◽  
pp. 459-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chia-Ming Chang ◽  
Shih-Cheng Liao ◽  
Hung-Chi Chiang ◽  
Ying-Yeh Chen ◽  
Kwan-Cho Tseng ◽  
...  

SummaryAll suicides (n=12 497) in Taiwan in 2001–2004 were identified from mortality records retrieved from the National Health Insurance Database. Altogether, 95.1% of females and 84.9% of males had been in contact with healthcare services in the year before their death. Females received significantly more diagnoses of psychiatric disorders (48.0% v. 30.2%) and major depression (17.8% v. 7.4%) than males. Such differences were consistent across different medical settings where contact with hospital-based non-psychiatric physicians was as common as with general practitioners (GPs). However, diagnoses of psychiatric disorders were underdiagnosed in both genders.


Author(s):  
Mylene Queiroz-Franklin

Among the settings where there is a need for interpreting services, healthcare contexts require special attention, given the complex nature of medical practice, which consequently imposes different challenges to interpreters. In Brazil, the language barriers faced by patients who do not speak Portuguese are handled mostly by volunteers without any specific training. This article gives an overview of the current demands for interpreters in medical settings in the country and the need for analysis and actions aimed at the development of a professional field to ensure access to health services in the country for linguistic minorities by qualified interpreters. There is a need for public policies to recognize the demand and elaborate linguistic access tools. There is an urgent need to include this specialization among interpreting studies agendas, in the Brazilian context, to include interpreting for healthcare.


Author(s):  
Gordon Parker ◽  
Matthew Hyett

There are two broad strategies for screening and quantifying depression in medical settings. The first approach is replying upon measures developed in psychiatric samples, and the second approach is to concede that symptoms are substantially different and to develop customized scales. Here we discuss the merits of several specific scales for measuring depression in physical settings and make the case for scales tailored to specific populations. A subsequent chapter (Babaei and Mitchell) will present a contrasting position. There are two broad strategies for screening and quantifying depression in medical settings. The first approach involves using measures developed in psychiatric samples and assuming that their relevance holds. The second approach is to concede that there are intrinsic limitations to extrapolating those ‘‘general’’ measures to medically ill populations. In the former case the hypothesis is that symptoms of depression are essentially the same when depression occurs with and without physical illness. In the latter case the hypothesis is the symptoms are substantially different. Pursuing the latter, there are two key concerns. Firstly, such an approach assumes some constancy to the nature of depression across differing psychiatric and medical settings. Depression, however, is difficult enough to define in psychiatric patient samples. Even ignoring the debate as to whether depression is viewed as comprising a set of subtypes or is best modeled along a continuum, quantifying clinical depression remains problematic, as detailed elsewhere in this book. Over the past few decades, clinical depression has most commonly been viewed as synonymous with major depression, but, as numerous studies have shown, comparable symptomatic distress and disability associated with major depression and minor depression—and even with subsyndromal depression—begs an obvious question: Can imposing a cutoff score on a dimensional measure of depression accurately distinguish true cases and true non-cases in a psychiatric sample? Further, assuming that a cutoff is derived with an acceptable classification rate, can we extrapolate decision rules derived from psychiatric samples to screen and quantify depression caseness in the medically ill? As measures that have been widely used for decades (such as the Zung and the Beck Depression Inventory) generate widely differing cutoff scores across psychiatric, general practice, and medical settings, there would appear to be quantitatively and possibly qualitative differences to the nature of depression in medical contexts, making general measure extrapolation problematic.


2020 ◽  
pp. 30-38
Author(s):  
Gavin Weightman

This chapter focuses on Daniel Sutton's method of 'Suttonian' inoculation against smallpox. It is not easy to appreciate now how it might be possible for a 'medical revolution' to take place when it involved absolutely no advance in the understanding of infections, nor any close studies of the effectiveness of different drugs or medical procedures. But 'Suttonian inoculation' was a genuine breakthrough, and was recognised as such at the time by most medical authorities. It evolved from a rejection of customary medical practice and a partial return to the simplicity of the Turkish method of inoculation. Lady Mary's anecdotal accounts of the work of the elderly Greek ladies were probably more influential than any theories about the nature of disease. It was a rustic kind of revolution which began in the Suffolk village of Kenton in the mid-eighteenth century.


2020 ◽  
pp. 6445-6446
Author(s):  
Michael Sharpe

All physicians experience situations in which they need the knowledge, skills, and attitudes commonly thought of as belonging to psychiatry. This section of the book aims to help physicians to acquire these. It includes: (1) guidance on how to assess medical patients for psychiatric illness; (2) information about psychiatric presentations and the differential diagnoses most relevant to general medical practice; (3) brief reviews of the psychiatric disorders most commonly seen in general medical practice and the practical management of these; (4) guidance on the use of psychotropic drugs and psychological treatments when given as part of general medical care; (5) evidence-based strategies for helping patients who are smoking, using alcohol excessively, or who are overweight.


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 230-238
Author(s):  
Luciana Pereira de Vasconcelos ◽  
Luiza de Oliveira Rodrigues ◽  
Moacyr Roberto Cuce Nobre

Purpose Good medical practice, evidence-based medicine (EBM) and clinical practice guidelines (CPG) have been recurring subjects in the scientific literature. EBM advocates argue that good medical practice should be guided by evidence-based CPG. On the other hand, critical authors of EBM methodology argue that various interests undermine the quality of evidence and reliability of CPG recommendations. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate patient related outcomes of CPG implementation, in light of EBM critics. Design/methodology/approach The authors opted for a rapid literature review. Findings There are few studies evaluating the effectiveness of CPG in patient-related outcomes. The systematic reviews found are not conclusive, although they suggest a positive impact of CPGs in relevant outcomes. Research limitations/implications This work was not a systematic review of literature, which is its main limitation. On the other hand, arguments from EBM and CPG critics were considered, and thus it can enlighten health institutions to recognize the caveats and to establish policies toward care improvement. Originality/value The paper is the first of its kind to discuss, based on the published literature, next steps toward better health practice, while acknowledging the caveats of this process.


2009 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 451-457 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Zimmerman ◽  
J. N. Galione ◽  
I. Chelminski ◽  
J. B. McGlinchey ◽  
D. Young ◽  
...  

BackgroundThe DSM-IV symptom criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD) are somewhat lengthy, with many studies showing that treatment providers have difficulty recalling all nine symptoms. Moreover, the criteria include somatic symptoms that are difficult to apply in patients with medical illnesses. In a previous report, we developed a briefer definition of MDD that was composed of the mood and cognitive symptoms of the DSM-IV criteria, and found high levels of agreement between the simplified and full DSM-IV definitions. The goal of the present study was to replicate these findings in another large sample of psychiatric out-patients and to extend the findings to other patient samples.MethodWe interviewed 1100 psychiatric out-patients and 210 pathological gamblers presenting for treatment and 1200 candidates for bariatric surgery. All patients were interviewed by a diagnostic rater who administered a semi-structured interview. We inquired about all symptoms of depression for all patients.ResultsIn all three samples high levels of agreement were found between the DSM-IV and the simpler definition of MDD. Summing across all 2510 patients, the level of agreement between the two definitions was 95.5% and the κ coefficient was 0.87.ConclusionsAfter eliminating the four somatic criteria from the DSM-IV definition of MDD, a high level of concordance was found between this simpler definition and the original DSM-IV classification. This new definition offers two advantages over the current DSM-IV definition – it is briefer and it is easier to apply with medically ill patients because it is free of somatic symptoms.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document