Misidentification of depression in primary care may be in part an artifact of the use of the psychiatric model of caseness in the primary care setting. Our results are most consistent with a chronic disease-based model of depressive disorder, in which patients classified as false positive and false negative occupy a clinical middle ground between clearly depressed and clearly nondepressed patients. Family physicians appear to respond to meaningful clinical cues in assigning the diagnosis of depression to these distressed and impaired patients.
The Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (J. C. Coyne & M. M. Calarco, 1995) was used to examine how primary care and psychiatric outpatients with recent or past major depression appraised their prospects and structured their lives. They were compared with nondistressed and distressed primary care patients. Both depressed groups scored higher than the nondistressed patients for Lack of Energy, Management of Burden on Others, Need to Maintain a Balance in Life, Fear of Taking Risks, Imposition of Limitations on Life, and Sense of Stigma. The distressed group fell between the depressed psychiatric and the nondistressed groups, and generally did not differ from the depressed primary care group. Past depression did not explain differences associated with more recent depression and distress. Distress entails a need to manage its effects on others, but depression in psychiatric patients may produce a more profound reorganization of self-concept, relationships, and coping.
Postoperative urinary residuals were lower, patients voided more frequently, and fewer catheterizations were needed when given low-dose naloxone while receiving morphine patient-controlled analgesia. At the same time, naloxone in small doses was found to have negligible effect on overall patient pain control.
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