| Literature DB >> 29338537 |
Tessa Magnée1, Derek P de Beurs1, Francois G Schellevis1,2, Peter F Verhaak1,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate developments in antidepressant prescriptions by Dutch general practitioners, alongside the national introduction of mental health nurses. Antidepressant prescriptions are very common in general practice, but are often not in line with recommendations. The recent introduction of mental health nurses may have decreased antidepressant prescriptions, as general practitioners (GPs) have greater potential to offer psychological treatment as a first choice option instead of medication.Entities:
Keywords: General practice; antidepressive agents; depression; guidelines; mental health; prescriptions
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29338537 PMCID: PMC5901440 DOI: 10.1080/02813432.2018.1426145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Prim Health Care ISSN: 0281-3432 Impact factor: 2.581
Figure 1.GP antidepressant prescriptions for anxiety or depression in 2011–2015 (not adjusted for episode duration). GP, general practitioner.
Time trends of (total and immediate) antidepressant prescriptions by Dutch general practitioners for patients during episodes of anxiety or depression (2011–2015) and associations with the presence of a mental health nurse, type of diagnosis, and patient’s sex and age.
| (A) Receiving at least oneantidepressant prescriptionduring an episode | (B) Receiving an immediateantidepressant prescriptionduring an episode | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients in analyses | ||||||
| Number of observations (episodes) in analyses | ||||||
| OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | |||
| Year | ||||||
| 2011 (reference) | ||||||
| 2012 | 0.94 | .13 | 0.87–1.02 | 0.95 | .42 | 0.84–1.08 |
| 2013 | 1.16 | .02 | 1.02–1.32 | |||
| 2014 | 1.04 | .35 | 0.96–1.13 | 0.99 | .86 | 0.86–1.13 |
| 2015 | ||||||
| Employment of the MHN | ||||||
| Episode started while no MHN was working in the practice (reference) | ||||||
| Episode started while an MHN was working in the practice | 1.01 | .74 | 0.93–1.10 | 1.02 | .71 | 0.90–1.16 |
| At least one MHN consultation during the episode | ||||||
| No (reference) | ||||||
| Yes | 1.00 | .90 | 0.94–1.07 | |||
| Type of diagnosis | ||||||
| Depressive or anxious feelings (reference) | ||||||
| Depressive or anxiety disorder | ||||||
| Sex | ||||||
| Male (reference) | ||||||
| Female | 1.04 | .22 | 0.98–1.10 | 0.99 | .76 | 0.91–1.07 |
| Age category | ||||||
| 10–19 years (reference) | ||||||
| 19–45 years | ||||||
| 45–65 years | ||||||
GP: general practitioner, MHN: mental health nurse, OR: odds ratio. 95%CI =95% confidence interval. An OR higher than 1.0 reflects an increased chance of receiving at least one (immediate) prescription of antidepressants during an episode, compared to the reference group. Analyses were adjusted for other medication use (yes/no), and episode duration centred for the average. Episodes had a duration of 199.9 days (SD = 255.3, max = 1823), or 28.6 weeks, on average. Mean episode duration decreased from 286.7 days for episodes started in 2011 (SD = 417.7) to 122.4 days for episodes started in 2015 (SD = 86.9).
Figure 2.GP antidepressant prescriptions according to diagnosis in 2011–2015 (not adjusted for episode duration). GP: general practitioner.
Figure 3.GP antidepressant prescriptions for anxiety or depression: the effect of mental health nurses (not adjusted for episode duration). GP: general practitioner.