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Cited by 42 publications
(47 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
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“…Attention must be called to the fact the predominance of women in the studied population is characteristic of the population which attended in primary care in Brazil, a fact demonstrated in previous studies 5,6,16 reporting that more women look for medical attention than men.…”
Section: Study Design and Samplementioning
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Attention must be called to the fact the predominance of women in the studied population is characteristic of the population which attended in primary care in Brazil, a fact demonstrated in previous studies 5,6,16 reporting that more women look for medical attention than men.…”
Section: Study Design and Samplementioning
confidence: 89%
“…As previously discussed in literature 9,14,15 , the GHQ-12 may be used with different cut-off points for considering patients positive for CMD. In primary care, non-specified emotional distress is very common 9,16 , requiring cut-off points that can detect all kinds of suffering. Because of that in this article will be considered those patients with three and four points as one group, with Common Mental Disorders (CMD3), and those with five or more points as another, denominated Severe Common Mental Disorders (CMD5).…”
Section: General Health Questionnaire (Ghq-12)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study was originally designed to evaluate an intervention for training primary care and mental health workers in shared care ("apoio matricial" -matrix support), which is published elsewhere 23 . The population of interest was composed of patients from 20 urban health family primary care centers (family health units) with 27 family health teams from these four cities.…”
Section: Research Design and Populationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Very often patients in emotional distress are not identified as suffering from a mental disorder 43 and those who are identified may not receive adequate treatment for their condition 44 . This issue points to the need for training primary care professionals in how to properly deal with emotional distress.…”
Section: Implications For Clinical Practice and For Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%