Author:
DEL PICCOLO L.,SALTINI A.,ZIMMERMANN C.,DUNN G.
Abstract
Background. In primary care consultations patients with emotional distress tend to give verbal cues
or symptom reports with psychological or psychiatric contents. This study examined the cue
behaviour defined not only by psychological, but also by medical, social and life episodes related
contents in patients with and without emotional distress, recognized and not by their GP. The GP's
verbal behaviour in relation to patients' cue emission was also investigated.Method. For the six participating GPs two groups of matched pairs of patients (N = 238) were
created. The two groups comprised either patients considered by GPs as being without emotional
distress or patients considered as emotionally distressed. Within each pair, one patient was a case
(GHQ-12 score > 2) and the other was the matched control (GHQ-12 score < 3). The medical
interviews with these patients were transcribed and classified according to the Verona Medical
Interview Classification System (VR-MICS).Results. GHQ positive patients of both groups gave more cues in terms of total proportion than
their matched controls (GHQ negative patients). The proportion of cues given by patients was
related also to GP's verbal behaviour, increasing with closed psychosocial questions and decreasing
with the use of active interview techniques. Attribution of emotional distress was more frequent
when patients were high attenders and had a past psychiatric history. The content of cues changed
in relation to GP's attribution: recognized patients gave more cues and more often with
psychological content, patients not recognized as distressed gave mainly cues related to their
lifestyle and life episodes.Conclusions. To improve the recognition of those emotionally distressed patients most likely to be
missed GPs should increase their attention to cues related to life style and life episodes.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
46 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献