PsychEducation.org (home)
Resources
for Primary Care Treatment of
Depression and Anxiety
(Reorganized and Updated Nov. 2004)
Primary care providers treat at least 50% of the mental health problems in the U.S.Wells. And have less time to do it than mental health providers. And have little support for their efforts. As a small step toward such support, here are resources selected by and in some cases developed in collaboration with my local primary care colleagues.
| Diagnosis | Treatment |
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| For Kids: Washington State PCP Resource Center | |
Diagnosis
Diagnostic Aids
- Clues on
distinguishing ADHD
and bipolar disorder in kids-- before using stimulants
- Your guide to diagnosis of bipolar
variations (treatment too, if you can't refer)
Screening Tools
("How many conditions can
a GP screen for?" -- BMJ
editorial)
Bipolar Disorder
Note that the FDA
now says you "should" screen before using an antidepressant,
every time. Until late 2007, this site recommended and made available
the MDQ (Mood Disorders Questionnaire). However, this instrument was then
copyrighted. Fortunately, an even better test -- for primary care
settings -- is available without copyright.
Download the Primary Care
MoodCheck
Depression
- The McArthur Foundation's PHQ-9 -- simple, visual scoring,
no advertising
PHQ-9 scoring
guidelines
McArthur Foundation's Depression Management Tool Kit (lower left hand corner
of their home page)
- Who should get a PHQ-9? A two-question approach with 97%
sensitivity (specificity moot if used as gross screen)Arroll,
full text
1. During the past
month have you often been bothered by feeling down, depressed, or
hopeless?
2. During the past
month have you often been bothered by little interest or pleasure
in doing things?
Dementia
- Powerpoint presentation, May 2004, UCSF
team reviews dementia screening
- Their favorite, the Brief Alzheimer's Screen (BAS),
described on this slide
- Online simple
Word document supporting very similar test, from same group
- Memory
testing annually, at home? Dr. Ashford's (UCSF) online
test for same ($10/yr)
Treatment
Medications: PAR cues, guidelines, lists for patients
Mood stabilizer "menu" -- if it's a bipolar variant, what med's and risks follow?
Mood stabilizer instructions -- dosing and other info' for your PAR.
Antidepressant options -- all evidence-based options to review with your patient.
Antidepressant medications -- a master list to review with patients.
Number needed to harm -- antidepressant switch risk in kids
My Exercise
essay: "Not the Usual Rap"
Or you can try the more typical Exercise:
why, how to, how to restart -- three 1-pagers for patients
Mood charts for your patients to track symptoms while under
treatment:
Paper
version (Harvard's chart with minor modifications, like an exercise
column)
Electronic
version (very slick, if your patient or her parent uses a computer every
day)
Texas Medication Algorithm Project
More effective than "treatment as usual" in controlled trial
The Depression Algorithm ; and the Project Overview with navigation bar
Depression Algorithm Doc's manual; a pdf; use bookmarks to navigate
-- see the "at a glance" summary; and
-- critical decision-point guidelines (a bit convoluted?)Other algorithms: bipolar manic, bipolar depressed
A Lithium Augmentation Primer (you're right, this is the second time I linked this, hint hint)
Project homepage; and the depression guidelines introduction
Depression: Management in Primary Care
(Working 2nd draft; a pdf; use elevator shaft to find page #)- Mild depression: antidepressants explicitly "not recommended" (page 3)
- Moderate-severe depression: medications before therapy (page 4)
- Non-response: explicit antidepressant recommendations (page 5)
Antidepressants in bipolar disorder: the controversy
Light therapy for seasonal affective disorder
FDA rulings on antidepressant medications
An essay about alternative or herbal approaches
An essay for patients about evidence in medicine