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This article originally appeared in BMJ USA
At a recent meeting, the chief of psychiatry at my institution
was explaining why it is difficult to get primary care physicians to
screen their patients for depression. One of the reasons, he said, is
that it creates a "perturbation in the ergonomics of the primary care
visit." Primary care physicians have 16 to 18 minutes for the average
patient encounter. Asking the patient a question designed to screen for
depression One way to screen for depression without perturbing the doctor-patient
encounter is for office staff to administer a screening questionnaire.
Gilbody and colleagues performed a systematic review of randomized
controlled trials of the administration of psychiatric screening
questionnaires and the feedback of results to clinicians in
non-psychiatric settings (BMJ USA p 179). Results were not encouraging.
Feedback of scores for all patients did not increase the overall rate
of recognition of mental disorders. Recognition of depression did
increase in two studies of selective feedback for high scorers
("high-risk patients"), but there was no impact on the rate of
intervention. The authors note that feedback is most effective when
accompanied by an educational program and an outside referral agency
that assumes responsibility for management.
Will informatics improve the ergonomics of primary care? Mitchell and
Sullivan conducted a systematic review of studies evaluating the impact
of computers on primary care (BMJ USA p 195). They found that computing
systems can improve immunization rates and delivery of other preventive
services, increase prescribing of generic drugs, and reduce ordering of
unnecessary tests. Thornett, however, argues in a rapid response that
computer use has "significant detrimental effects" on the
doctor-patient encounter The ergonomics of clinical practice are thoroughly degraded when
doctors find themselves spending more time with insurers and auditors
than with patients. A news article in this issue reports on MERFA Finally, in a paper from the BMJ 's Christmas
issue, Norton reports how the Gungan inhabitants of the planet Naboo,
depicted in Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace, appear
to have the fungal infection tinea imbricata (BMJ USA p 205). This is
evidence, he says, of extraterrestrial visitations to earth.
Psychiatric screening questionnaires (BMJ USA p 179)
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/322/7283/406
Computers in primary care (BMJ USA p 195)
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/322/7281/279
Rapid responses (to paper by Mitchell & Sullivan) (BMJ USA p
199) http://bmj.com/cgi/doi/10.1136/bmjusa.01040006
Medicare (BMJ USA p 209)
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/322/7287/638
Tinea on Naboo (BMJ USA p 205)
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/321/7276/1619
eg, "Have you been bothered recently by feeling down,
depressed, or hopeless?"
may elicit a lengthy response, or it may
reveal a serious psychosocial problem demanding the physician's
attention, which then disrupts the clinic schedule. So, the easiest
approach in the midst of a harried day at the office is to avoid posing
the question.
eg, increasing consultation time and
preventing doctors from developing an empathic relationship with
patients (BMJ USA p 199).
the
Medicare Education and Regulatory Fairness Act of 2001
which, if
passed by Congress, will provide some relief to physicians from the
130 000 pages of laws and regulations dealing with Medicare (BMJ USA p 209).