| Literature DB >> 30848056 |
Umberto Volpe1, Alessio M Monteleone1, Valdo Ricca2, Elisa Corsi2, Angela Favaro3, Paolo Santonastaso3, Serafino De Giorgi4, Caterina Renna4, Giovanni Abbate Daga5, Federico Amianto5, Matteo Balestrieri6, Gian Luigi Luxardi7, Massimo Clerici8, Alberto Alamia8, Cristina Segura-Garcia9, Marianna Rania9, Palmiero Monteleone1,10, Mario Maj1.
Abstract
Two hundred forty six patients with eating disorders (EDs) recruited from eight Italian specialized treatment centres were administered with the World Health Organization "Encounter Form," a standardized schedule that makes it possible to characterize the clinical pathways that patients follow to reach specialized care. The median time from symptoms onset to specialized care was 114 weeks. Primary "points of access to care" were general practitioners (25%), psychiatrists (18%), and clinical nutritionists (17%), followed by various other carers. All patients received specific psychotherapy, whereas only 11% of them were given psychotropic drugs. EDs are characterized by complex care pathways, with low rates of direct access to specialized care. Although the role of general practitioners remains crucial, they tend to follow different clinical routes to refer ED patients. Educational programmes on EDs should be addressed to general practitioners and clinical nutritionists, in order to ease the transition of ED patients to a mental health care setting.Entities:
Keywords: anorexia nervosa; binge eating disorder; bulimia nervosa; duration of untreated illness; eating disorders; health care policy; pathways to care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30848056 DOI: 10.1002/erv.2669
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Eat Disord Rev ISSN: 1072-4133