## Abstract Studies of the primary care treatment of depressed elderly patients are constrained by limited time and space and by subject burden. Research assessments must balance these constraints with the need for obtaining clinically meaningful information. Due to the wideβranging impact of depre
Confidence of primary care physicians in assessing the suicidality of geriatric patients
β Scribed by Mark S. Kaplan; Margaret E. Adamek; Jennifer L. Martin
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 76 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
- DOI
- 10.1002/gps.420
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
This study examined the confidence levels of physicians in assessing the risk of suicide among older adults in clinical settings. Of the 300 physicians who were selected from a population of 4980 family practice, internal medicine, and geriatric physicians in Illinois, 63% responded to the mail survey. Several categorical items inquired about specific assessment and treatment approaches, referral resources used, barriers to meeting the mental health needs of older patients, and sources of training in suicide risk assessment. All the training items (suicide assessment in medical school, residency, and CME courses; rating of medical school training; and insufficient training in geriatric mental health) were significantly (pβ<β0.01) associated with confidence in assessing suicidality. The overall model consisting of six variables explained 57% of the variation in confidence scores [F (6,β130)β=β28.48, pβ<β0.001]. Three variables accounted for 50% of the explained variance: confidence in diagnosing depression, residency training in the assessment of suicide risk, and assessment of the intentional misuse of medication. Confidence in diagnosing depression (Ξ²β=β0.38,βpβ<β0.001) was the strongest predictor. More effective mental health care will require specific preparation in treating geriatric patients through the full spectrum of medical training, including medical school, residency, and CME courses. Improved prevention of elderly suicide hinges on the enhancement of clinical skills in diagnosing and treating geriatric depression. Copyright Β© 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
dbserver ratings of patients' physical functioning in hospital (e.g., from nurses) are not included because thev were considered immactical and unreliable for comparisons between patients in different settiigs.
## Abstract ## Objective Chronic medical problems might amplify suicide risk in later life. Feelings of happiness may reduce this risk. We tested the hypothesis that happiness attenuates the association between number of selfβreported chronic diseases and suicidal distress. ## Methods A sample o
## Abstract ## Objective To estimate the predictive value of the 30βquestion Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) in Spanish and calculate the most adequate cutβpoint for its use in Primary Health Care consultations. ## Method 218 patients over the age of 64 treated at three health centers of Area 1