976 resultados para Depression detection
Resumo:
RESUMO:A depressão clínica é uma patologia do humor, dimensional e de natureza crónica, evoluindo por episódios heterogéneos remitentes e recorrentes, de gravidade variável, correspondendo a categorias nosológicas porventura artificiais mas clinicamente úteis, de elevada prevalência e responsável por morbilidade importante e custos sociais crescentes, calculando-se que em 2020 os episódios de depressão major constituirão, em todo o mundo, a segunda causa de anos de vida com saúde perdidos. Como desejável, na maioria dos países os cuidados de saúde primários são a porta de entrada para o acesso à recepção de cuidados de saúde. Cerca de 50% de todas as pessoas sofrendo de depressão acedem aos cuidados de saúde primários mas apenas uma pequena proporção é correctamente diagnosticada e tratada pelos médicos prestadores de cuidados primários apesar dos tratamentos disponíveis serem muito efectivos e de fácil aplicabilidade. A existência de dificuldades e barreiras a vários níveis – doença, doentes, médicos, organizações de saúde, cultura e sociedade – contribuem para esta generalizada ineficiência de que resulta uma manutenção do peso da depressão que não tem sido possível reduzir através das estratégias tradicionais de organização de serviços. A equipa comunitária de saúde mental e a psiquiatria de ligação são duas estratégias de intervenção com desenvolvimento conceptual e organizacional respectivamente na Psiquiatria Social e na Psicossomática. A primeira tem demonstrado sucesso na abordagem clínica das doenças mentais graves na comunidade e a segunda na abordagem das patologias não psicóticas no hospital geral. Todavia, a efectividade destas estratégias não se tem revelado transferível para o tratamento das perturbações depressivas e outras patologias mentais comuns nos cuidados de saúde primários. Novos modelos de ligação e de trabalho em equipa multidisciplinar têm sido demonstrados como mais eficazes e custo-efectivos na redução do peso da depressão, ao nível da prestação dos cuidados de saúde primários, quando são atinentes com os seguintes princípios estratégicos e organizacionais: detecção sistemática e abordagem da depressão segundo o modelo médico, gestão integrada de doença crónica incluindo a continuidade de cuidados mediante colaboração e partilha de responsabilidades intersectorial, e a aposta na melhoria contínua da qualidade. Em Portugal, não existem dados fiáveis sobre a frequência da depressão, seu reconhecimento e a adequação do tratamento ao nível dos cuidados de saúde primários nem se encontra validada uma metodologia de diagnóstico simples e fiável passível de implementação generalizada. Foi realizado um estudo descritivo transversal com os objectivos de estabelecer a prevalência pontual de depressão entre os utentes dos cuidados de saúde primários e as taxas de reconhecimento e tratamento pelos médicos de família e testar metodologias de despiste, com base num questionário de preenchimento rápido – o WHO-5 – associado a uma breve entrevista estruturada – o IED. Foram seleccionados aleatoriamente 31 médicos de família e avaliados 544 utentes consecutivos, dos 16 aos 90 anos, em quatro regiões de saúde e oito centros de saúde dotados com 219 clínicos gerais. Os doentes foram entrevistados por psiquiatras, utilizando um método padronizado, o SCAN, para diagnóstico de perturbação depressiva segundo os critérios da 10ª edição da Classificação Internacional de Doenças. Apurou-se que 24.8% dos utentes apresentava depressão. No melhor dos cenários, menos de metade destes doentes, 43%, foi correctamente identificada como deprimida pelo seu médico de família e menos de 13% dos doentes com depressão estavam bem medicados com antidepressivo em dose adequada. A aplicação seriada dos dois instrumentos não revelou dificuldades tendo permitido a identificação de pelo menos 8 em cada 10 doentes deprimidos e a exclusão de 9 em cada 10 doentes não deprimidos. Confirma-se a elevada prevalência da patologia depressiva ao nível dos cuidados primários em Portugal e a necessidade de melhorar a capacidade diagnóstica e terapêutica dos médicos de família. A intervenção de despiste, que foi validada, parece adequada para ser aplicada de modo sistemático em Centros de Saúde que disponham de recursos técnicos e organizacionais para o tratamento efectivo dos doentes com depressão. A obtenção da linha de base de indicadores de prevalência, reconhecimento e tratamento das perturbações depressivas nos cuidados de saúde primários, bem como a validação de instrumentos de uso clínico, viabiliza a capacitação do sistema para a produção de uma campanha nacional de educação de grande amplitude como a proposta no Plano Nacional de Saúde 2004-2010.------- ABSTRACT: Clinical depression is a dimensional and chronic affective disorder, evolving through remitting and recurring heterogeneous episodes with variable severity corresponding to clinically useful artificial diagnostic categories, highly prevalent and producing vast morbidity and growing social costs, being estimated that in 2020 unipolar major depression will be the second cause of healthy life years lost all over the world. In most countries, primary care are the entry point for access to health care. About 50% of all individuals suffering from depression within the community reach primary health care but a smaller proportion is correctly diagnosed and treated by primary care physicians though available treatments are effective and easily manageable. Barriers at various levels – pertaining to the illness itself, to patients, doctors, health care organizations, culture and society – contribute to the inefficiency of depression management and pervasiveness of depression burden, which has not been possible to reduce through classical service strategies. Community mental health teams and consultation-liaison psychiatry, two conceptual and organizational intervention strategies originating respectively within social psychiatry and psychosomatics, have succeeded in treating severe mental illness in community and managing non-psychotic disorders in the general hospital. However, these strategies effectiveness has not been replicated and transferable for the primary health care setting treatment of depressive disorders and other common mental pathology. New modified liaison and multidisciplinary team work models have been shown as more efficacious and cost-effective reducing depression burden at the primary care level namely when in agreement with principles such as: systematic detection of depression and approach accordingly to the medical model, chronic llness comprehensive management including continuity of care through collaboration and shared responsibilities between primary and specialized care, and continuous quality improvement. There are no well-founded data available in Portugal for depression prevalence, recognition and treatment adequacy in the primary care setting neither is validated a simple, teachable and implementable recognition and diagnostic methodology for primary care. With these objectives in mind, a cross-sectional descriptive study was performed involving 544 consecutive patients, aged 16-90 years, recruited from the ambulatory of 31 family doctors randomized within the 219 physicians working in eight health centres from four health regions. Screening strategies were tested based on the WHO-5 questionnaire in association with a short structured interview based on ICD-10 criteria. Depression ICD-10 diagnosis was reached according to the gold standard SCAN interview performed by trained psychiatrists. Any depressive disorder ICD-10 diagnosis was present in 24.8% of patients. Through the use of favourable recognition criteria, 43% of the patients were correctly identified as depressed by their family doctor and about 13% of the depressed patients were prescribed antidepressants at an adequate dosage. The serial administration of both instruments – WHO-5 and short structured interview – was feasible, allowing the detection of eight in ten positive cases and the exclusion of nine in ten non-cases. In Portugal, at the primary care level, high depressive disorder prevalence is confirmed as well as the need to improve depression diagnostic and treatment competencies of family doctors. A two-stage screening strategy has been validated and seems adequate for systematic use in health centres where technical and organizational resources for the effective management of depression are made available. These results can be viewed as primary care depressive disorders baseline indicators of prevalence, detection and treatment and, along with clinical useful instruments, the health system is more capacitated for the establishment of a national level large education campaign on depression such as proposed in the National Health Plan 2004-2010.
Resumo:
O presente estudo desenvolve-se numa perspectiva prática, visando à integração de conhecimentos gerados pela pesquisa a atividades assistenciais no hospital geral universitário, dirigindo-se, especificamente, à questão da detecção da depressão. A depressão é um problema de saúde pública no mundo inteiro, transtorno mental de alta prevalência, com elevado custo para os sistemas de saúde. Entre pacientes clínicos e cirúrgicos, hospitalizados, aumenta a complexidade dos tratamentos, implica maior morbidade e mortalidade, importando também no aumento do tempo e dos custos das internações. Por outro lado, a depressão é subdiagnosticada. Este estudo, originado de um projeto cujo objetivo foi criar um instrumento para a detecção de depressão, utilizável na rotina assistencial, a partir da avaliação do desempenho de escalas de rastreamento já existentes, desdobra-se em três artigos. O primeiro, já aceito para publicação em revista indexada internacionalmente, é a retomada de estudos anteriores, realizados no final da década de 1980. É apresentada a comparação da detecção de depressão, realizada por médicos não-psiquiatras e por enfermeiros, no Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre (HCPA), em 1987 e em 2002. O segundo artigo apresenta o processo de construção da nova escala, a partir da seleção de itens de outras escalas já validadas, utilizando modelos logísticos de Rasch. A nova escala, composta por apenas seis itens, exige menos tempo para sua aplicação. O terceiro artigo é um estudo de avaliação de desempenho da nova escala, denominada Escala de Depressão em Hospital Geral (EDHG), realizado em uma outra amostra de pacientes adultos clínicos e cirúrgicos internados no HCPA. O segundo e terceiro artigos já foram encaminhados para publicação internacional. Esses estudos, realizados em unidades de internação clínicas e cirúrgicas do Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, permitiram as seguintes conclusões: a) comparando-se os achados de 1987 com os de 2002, a prevalência de depressão e o seu diagnóstico, em pacientes adultos clínicos e cirúrgicos internados, mantêm-se nos mesmos níveis; b) foi possível selecionar um conjunto de seis itens, que constituíram a nova Escala de Depressão em Hospital Geral (EDHG), baseando-se no desempenho individual de cada um dos 48 itens componentes de outras três escalas (BDI, CESD e HADS); c) a EDHG apresentou desempenho semelhante aos das escalas que lhe deram origem, usando o PRIME-MD como padrão-ouro, com a vantagem de ter um pequeno número de itens, podendo constituir-se num dispositivo de alerta para detecção de depressão na rotina de hospital geral.
Resumo:
Background Little information is available on the prevalence of depression in Malawi in primary health care settings and yet there is increased number of cases of depression presenting at tertiary level in severe form. Aim The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence of depression among patients and its detection by health care workers at a primary health care clinic in Zomba. Methods A cross-sectional survey was done among patients attending outpatient department at Matawale Health Centre, in Zomba from 1st July 2009 through to 31st July 2009. A total of 350 adults were randomly selected using systematic sampling. The “Self Reporting Questionnaire”, a questionnaire measuring social demographic factors and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I disorders Non-Patient Version (SCID-NP) were administered verbally to the participants. Findings The prevalence of depression among the patients attending the outpatients department was found to be 30.3% while detection rate of depression by clinician was 0%. Conclusion The results revealed the magnitude of depression which is prevalent in the primary health care clinic that goes undiagnosed and unmanaged. It is therefore recommended that primary health care providers do thorough assessments to address common mental disorders especially depression and they should be educated to recognise and manage depression appropriately at primary care level.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: To assess factors associated with depression symptoms in high school students. METHODS: A cross-sectional study involving high school students was conducted in the city of São Paulo, Brazil, 2001. A total of 724 students aged 14-18 years answered questionnaires on life and health conditions. Another questionnaire was applied to working (44.8%) and unemployed (22.9%) students to collect information on working conditions. Factors associated to depressive disorders were analyzed using multiple logistic regression controlled for occupational status. RESULTS: Overall prevalence rate of depression was 7.5%. Rates according to gender were 39 (10.3%) in females and 15 (4.3%) in males. The multiple logistic regression analysis showed that factors associated with depressive disorders were: poor self-perception of health (OR=5.78), being female (OR = 2.45), and alcohol consumption (OR=2.35). CONCLUSIONS: The study results showed that sociodemographic, lifestyle and health variables were associated with symptoms of depression in this population. These ndings suggest that it is important to have mental health professionals available in high schools for early detection of mental conditions and student counseling.
Resumo:
Background: The Rivermead Behavioural Memory Test (RBMT) assesses everyday memory by means of tasks which mimic daily challenges. The objective was to examine the validity of the Brazilian version of the RBMT to detect cognitive decline. Methods: 195 older adults were diagnosed as normal controls (NC) or with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or Alzheimer`s disease (AD) by a multidisciplinary team, after participants completed clinical and neuropsychological protocols. Results: Cronbach`s alpha was high for the total sample for the RBMT profile (PS) and screening scores (SS) (PS=0.91, SS=0.87) and for the AD group (PS=0.84, SS=0.85), and moderate for the MCI (PS=0.62, SS=0.55)and NC (PS=0.62, SS=0.60) groups. RBMT total scores, Appointment, Pictures, Immediate and Delayed Story, Immediate and Delayed Route, Delayed Message and Date contributed to differentiate NC from MCI. ROC curve analyses indicated high accuracy to differentiate NC from AD patients, and, moderate accuracy to differentiate NC from MCI. Conclusions: The Brazilian version of the RBMT seems to be an appropriate instrument to identify memory decline in Brazilian older adults.
Resumo:
Turkey coronavirus (TCoV) is a causative agent associated with poult enteritis and mortality syndrome (PEMS) in turkeys worldwide. The disease is an acute, highly contagious enteric disease that is characterized by depression, anorexia, diarrhea, and high mortality in commercial turkey flocks. The presence of TCoV in 12 intestinal-content samples, from turkey flocks aged between 10 and 104 days and exhibiting severe enteritis, was monitored during the period of 2004 to 2006. TCoV detection was accomplished by a reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) through amplification of the 3` UTR region, followed by amplification of genes 3 and 5. Molecular characterization of the viruses was done through amplification of genes 3 and 5 and showed evidence of genetic similarity between them, although they differed from sequences of other TCoVs described in the literature. In relation to gene 3, samples showed a greater relationship with chicken infectious bronchitis virus (IBV), while gene 5 showed greater identity with pheasant coronavirus (PhCoV). Our results suggest that the strategy of amplification of the 3` UTR region, followed by sequencing of genes 3 and 5, has proven to be an effective means of detecting TCoV in intestinal contents.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: To assess factors associated with depression symptoms in high school students. METHODS: A cross-sectional study involving high school students was conducted in the city of São Paulo, Brazil, 2001. A total of 724 students aged 14-18 years answered questionnaires on life and health conditions. Another questionnaire was applied to working (44.8%) and unemployed (22.9%) students to collect information on working conditions. Factors associated to depressive disorders were analyzed using multiple logistic regression controlled for occupational status. RESULTS: Overall prevalence rate of depression was 7.5%. Rates according to gender were 39 (10.3%) in females and 15 (4.3%) in males. The multiple logistic regression analysis showed that factors associated with depressive disorders were: poor self-perception of health (OR=5.78), being female (OR = 2.45), and alcohol consumption (OR=2.35). CONCLUSIONS: The study results showed that sociodemographic, lifestyle and health variables were associated with symptoms of depression in this population. These ndings suggest that it is important to have mental health professionals available in high schools for early detection of mental conditions and student counseling.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Among young people, about one in three females and one in five males report experiencing emotional distress but 65-95% of them do not receive help from health professionals. AIM: To assess the differences among young people who seek help and those who do not seek help for their psychological problems, considering the frequency of consultations to their GP and their social resources. DESIGN OF STUDY: School survey. SETTING: Post-mandatory school. METHOD: Among a Swiss national representative sample of 7429 students and apprentices (45.6% females) aged 16-20 years, 1931 young people reported needing help for a problem of depression/sadness (26%) and were included in the study. They were divided into those who sought help (n = 256) and those who did not (n = 1675), and differences between them were assessed. RESULTS: Only 13% of young people needing help for psychological problems consulted for that reason and this rate was positively associated with the frequency of consultations to the GP. However, 80% of young people who did not consult for psychological problems visited their GP at least once during the previous year. Being older or a student, having a higher depression score, or a history of suicide attempt were linked with a higher rate of help seeking. Moreover, confiding in adults positively influenced the rate of help seeking. CONCLUSION: The large majority of young people reporting psychological problems do not seek help, although they regularly consult their GP. While young people have difficulties in tackling issues about mental health, GPs could improve the situation by systematically inquiring about this issue.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: Motor changes in major depression (MD) may represent potential markers of treatment response. Physiological rhythms (heart rate/gait cycle/hand movements) have been recently shown to be neither random nor regular but to display a fractal temporal organisation, possibly reflecting a unique central "internal clock" control. Sleep and mood circadian rhythm modifications observed in MD also suggest a role for this "internal clock". We set out to examine the fractal pattern of motor activity in MD. METHODS: Ten depressed patients (46±20 years) and ten age- and gender-matched healthy controls (48±21 years) underwent a 6-h ambulatory monitoring of spontaneous hand activity with a validated wireless device. Fractal scaling exponent (α) was analysed. An α value close to 1 means the pattern is fractal. RESULTS: Healthy controls displayed a fractal pattern of spontaneous motor hand activity (α: 1.0±0.1), whereas depressed patients showed an alteration of that pattern (α:1.2±0.15, p<0.01), towards a smoother organisation. CONCLUSION: The alteration of fractal pattern of hand activity by depression further supports the role of a central internal clock in the temporal organisation of movements. This novel way of studying motor changes in depression might have an important role in the detection of endophenotypes and potential predictors of treatment response.
Resumo:
Sporothrix schenckii is the etiologic agent of sporotrichosis, a mycosis of world-wide distribution more commonly occurring in tropical regions. The immunological mechanisms involved in the prevention and control of sporotrichosis are not fully understood but apparently include both the humoral and cellular responses. In the present investigation, cellular immunity was evaluated by in vivo and in vitro tests in mice infected with yeast-like forms of S. schenckii. The disease developed systemically and cellular immunity was evaluated for a period of 10 weeks. The soluble antigen utilized in the tests was prepared from yeast form of the fungus through the sonication (20 min: 10 sonications at 50 W at 2-min intervals). Delayed hypersensitivity and lymphocyte transformation tests showed that the cellular immune response was depressed between the 4th and 6th week of infection when the animals were challenged with the soluble fungal antigen. This depression frequently indicates worsening of the disease, with greater involvement of the host. This is a promising field of research for a better understanding of the pathogeny of this mycosis.