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Rosalind Raine a Department of Public Health
and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1E
7HT, b Department of Psychological Medicine, Imperial
College of Science, Technology and Medicine, West Middlesex University
Hospital, Middlesex TW7 6AF
Correspondence
to: R Raine rosalind.raine{at}lshtm.ac.uk
Objectives:
To determine the strength of evidence for the effectiveness of mental health interventions for patients with
three common somatic conditions (chronic fatigue syndrome, irritable
bowel syndrome, and chronic back pain). To assess whether results
obtained in secondary care can be extrapolated to primary care and
suggest how future trials should be designed to provide more rigorous evidence.
What is already known on this topic
What this study adds
Effect sizes are larger in secondary care than in primary
care Patients in secondary care with chronic fatigue syndrome may benefit
from cognitive behaviour therapy Future research should focus on large pragmatic trials with longer term
follow up and economic evaluation
Design:
Systematic review.
Data sources:
Five electronic databases, key texts,
references in the articles identified, and citations from expert clinicians.
Study selection:
Randomised controlled trials
including participants with one of the three conditions for which no
physical cause could be found. Two reviewers screened sources and
independently extracted data and assessed quality.
Results:
Sixty one studies were identified; 20 were classified as primary care and 41 as secondary care. For some interventions, such as brief psychodynamic interpersonal therapy, little research was identified. However, results of meta-analyses and
of randomised controlled trials suggest that cognitive behaviour therapy and behaviour therapy are effective for chronic back pain and
chronic fatigue syndrome and that antidepressants are effective for
irritable bowel syndrome. Cognitive behaviour therapy and behaviour
therapy were effective in both primary and secondary care in patients
with back pain, although the evidence is more consistent and the effect
size larger for secondary care. Antidepressants seem effective in
irritable bowel syndrome in both settings but ineffective in chronic
fatigue syndrome.
Conclusions:
Treatment seems to be
more effective in patients in secondary care than in primary care. This
may be because secondary care patients have more severe disease, they receive a different treatment regimen, or the intervention is more
closely supervised. However, conclusions of effectiveness should be
considered in the light of the methodological weaknesses of the
studies. Large pragmatic trials are needed of interventions delivered
in primary care by appropriately trained primary care staff.
Patients with functional somatic symptoms are common in primary care
and may not receive effective mental health interventions
Research in secondary and primary care shows that cognitive behaviour
therapy and behaviour therapy help patients with back pain and that
antidepressants benefit patients with irritable bowel
syndrome