Author:
McCracken Cherie,Dalgard Odd Steffen,Ayuso-Mateos Jose Luis,Casey Patricia,Wilkinson Greg,Lehtinen Ville,Dowrick Christopher
Abstract
BackgroundLittle is known about patterns of healthcare use by people with
depression in Europe.AimsTo examine the use and cost of services by adults with depressive or
adjustment disorders in five European countries, and predictive
factors.MethodPeople aged 18–65 years with depressive or adjustment disorders
(n=427) in Ireland, Finland, Norway, Spain and the UK
provided information on predisposition (demographics, social support),
enablement (country, urban/rural, social function) and need (symptom
severity, perceived health status) for services. Outcome measures were
self-reported use Client Services Receipt Interview and costs of general
practice, generic, psychiatric or social services in the past 6
months.ResultsLess frequent use was made of generic services in Norway and psychiatric
services in the UK. Severity of depression, perceived health status,
social functioning and level of social support were significant
predictors of use; the number of people able to provide support was
positively associated with greater health service use.ConclusionsIndividual participant factors provided greater explanatory power than
national differences in healthcare delivery. The association between
social support and service use suggests that interventions may be needed
for those who lack social support.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
36 articles.
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