Primary care psychiatry: pertinent Arabian perspectives.
Author: El Rufaie OE.
Source:
EMHJ-Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 11 (3), 449-458, 2005.
There is substantive evidence of significant psychiatric morbidity among primary
care patients, mainly in the form of anxiety and depressive disorders. A careful
critical approach is essential for ensuring the cultural relevance, validity and
reliability of the psychiatric screening instruments used to identify such
morbidity. Most psychiatric morbidity among primary care patients passes
undetected by the primary care practitioners. This will inevitably lead to
unnecessary investigation and medication and the continuation of suffering for
patients. Comorbidity and physical presentation in most instances contribute
significantly to failure to detect psychiatric disorders. To deal with this
problem of hidden psychiatric morbidity, carefully designed educational and
training programmes need to be tailored to address the particular weaknesses and
needs of primary care doctors.
Publication Types:
Review