16 research outputs found
Young people's assessment of general practice care : a practice based study in primary care
TypescriptThesis (MPHP) -- University of Melbourne, Dept. of General Practice, Faculty of Medicine,Dentistry and Health Sciences, 2009Includes bibliographical references (leaves 94-102
Embedding effective depression care: using theory for primary care organisational and systems change
Background: depression and related disorders represent a significant part of general practitioners (GPs) daily work. Implementing the evidence about what works for depression care into routine practice presents a challenge for researchers and service designers. The emerging consensus is that the transfer of efficacious interventions into routine practice is strongly linked to how well the interventions are based upon theory and take into account the contextual factors of the setting into which they are to be transferred. We set out to develop a conceptual framework to guide change and the implementation of best practice depression care in the primary care setting.Methods: we used a mixed method, observational approach to gather data about routine depression care in a range of primary care settings via: audit of electronic health records; observation of routine clinical care; and structured, facilitated whole of organisation meetings. Audit data were summarised using simple descriptive statistics. Observational data were collected using field notes. Organisational meetings were audio taped and transcribed. All the data sets were grouped, by organisation, and considered as a whole case. Normalisation Process Theory (NPT) was identified as an analytical theory to guide the conceptual framework development.Results: five privately owned primary care organisations (general practices) and one community health centre took part over the course of 18 months. We successfully developed a conceptual framework for implementing an effective model of depression care based on the four constructs of NPT: coherence, which proposes that depression work requires the conceptualisation of boundaries of who is depressed and who is not depressed and techniques for dealing with diffuseness; cognitive participation, which proposes that depression work requires engagement with a shared set of techniques that deal with depression as a health problem; collective action, which proposes that agreement is reached about how care is organised; and reflexive monitoring, which proposes that depression work requires agreement about how depression work will be monitored at the patient and practice level. We describe how these constructs can be used to guide the design and implementation of effective depression care in a way that can take account of contextual differences.Conclusions: ideas about what is required for an effective model and system of depression care in primary care need to be accompanied by theoretically informed frameworks that consider how these can be implemented. The conceptual framework we have presented can be used to guide organisational and system change to develop common language around each construct between policy makers, service users, professionals, and researchers. This shared understanding across groups is fundamental to the effective implementation of change in primary care for depressio
A study on the correlation between indoor radon concentrations and the construction year of the dwellings
A benchmark for Monte Carlo simulations in gamma-ray spectrometry part II: true coincidence summing correction factors
The goal of this study is to provide a benchmark for the use of Monte Carlo simulation when applied to coincidence summing corrections. The examples are based on simple geometries: two types of germanium detectors and four kinds of sources, to mimic eight typical measurement conditions. The coincidence corrective factors are computed for four radionuclides. The exercise input files and calculation results with practical recommendations are made available for new users on a dedicated webpage.Article signat per 26 autors/es: M.-C. Lépy, C. Thiam, M. Anagnostakis, C. Cosar, A. de Blas, H. Dikmen, M.A. Duch, R. Galea, M.L. Ganea, S. Hurtado, K. Karfopoulos, A. Luca, G. Lutter, I. Mitsios, H. Persson, C. Potiriadis, S. Röttger, N. Salpadimos, M.I. Savva, O. Sima, T.T. Thanh, R.W. Townson, A. Vargas, T. Vasilopoulou, L. Verheyen, T. VidmarPostprint (author's final draft
Resilience as a response to the stigma of depression : a mixed methods analysis
Background:
Stigma has been shown to have a significant influence on help-seeking, adherence to treatment and social opportunities for those experiencing depression. There is a need for studies which examine how the stigma of depression intersects with responses to depression.
Methods:
161 telephone interviews with people experiencing depressive symptoms, derived from a longitudinal cohort study, were sampled on the basis of their perceptions of stigma around depression. Interview transcripts were searched for references to stigma and analysed thematically. The frequency of the themes was calculated and cross-referenced, producing a meta-theme matrix.
Results: Stigma was closely linked to ideas about responsibility for causation and/or continuation of depressive symptoms. Stigmatised individuals felt compelled to take steps to develop their resilience including drawing on existing support networks and expanding on positive emotions and personal strengths in order to counteract this stigma. However, such strategies were burdensome for some. These participants gained relief from relinquishing their personal responsibility.
Limitations:
The data were briefer than many interview studies. This narrowed its interpretation, but allowed a large sample of participants.
Conclusions:
When considering how to tailor therapies for those experiencing depressive symptoms, health professionals should consider the interaction of stigma with coping strategies. Many individuals can build on existing relationships and personal strengths to develop resilience, some however need to first relinquish the expectation of having sufficient pre-existing resilience within themselves
How do Australian patients rate their general practitioner? A descriptive study using the General Practice Assessment Questionnaire
Objective: To report patient responses to the General Practice Assessment Questionnaire (GPAQ) as a measure of satisfaction with health care received from Australian general practitioners.
Design, setting and participants: A clustered cross-sectional study involving general practice patients from 30 randomly selected general practices in Victoria. Between January and December 2005, a screening survey, including a postal version of the GPAQ, was mailed to 17 780 eligible patients.
Main outcome measure: Scores on the six GPAQ items. Results: We analysed data from 7130 patients who completed the screening survey and fulfilled our eligibility criteria. Levels of patient satisfaction with general practice care were generally high: mean GPAQ scores ranged from 68.6 (95% CI, 66.1–71.0) for satisfaction with access to the practice to 84.0 (95% CI, 82.2–85.4) for satisfaction with communication. Intracluster correlations for the GPAQ items ranged from 0.016 for overall satisfaction with the practice to 0.163 for satisfaction with access to the practice. Compared with national benchmarks in the United Kingdom, the GPs and practices participating in our study were rated higher on all six GPAQ items. Multivariable mixed effects linear regression showed that patients who were older, rated their health more highly, visited their GP more frequently and saw the same GP each time tended to express greater satisfaction with their care.
Conclusion: Generally patients reported high levels of satisfaction with GP care. Greater satisfaction with care was associated with older patients, good health, more frequent contact with the GP, and seeing the one GP consistently
A study on the correlation between indoor radon concentrations and the construction year of the dwellings
This work was supported by the Greek Radon Action Plan. This project has received funding from the Greek Atomic Energy Commission (EEAE).Summarization: The aim of this study is to assess the variation of indoor radon concentrations as a function of the construction year of the dwellings based on the data gathered by the nationwide radon survey performed in the framework of the Greek Radon Action Plan (GRAP). A radon measurements management system was developed and is under implementation to host all measurements. Within this framework, the data collected include the location and the radon concentration, as well as the construction year of the dwelling, the ventilation method and its frequency, the building materials, energy-saving class, etc. This work presents our study on the correlation between the construction year and the indoor radon concentration in the country and in the individual administrations where data were sufficient as Attica, Thessaly, etc. The main observation points out that the radon concentration decreases substantially as the focus moves from the oldest dwellings to those constructed in the 70 s, while the dwellings built from 1970 to 2000 show no trend. Although, high indoor radon concentrations in old dwellings could be attributed to structural problems, the newly built dwellings tend to show an increase in radon concentration, mainly due to the new regulation of Energy Efficiency of Buildings, established in the country in the last decade.Presented on: European Physical Journal - Special Topic
Polygenic phenotypic plasticity moderates the effects of severe childhood abuse on depressive symptom severity in adulthood: A 5-year prospective cohort study
<p><b>Objective</b> To test the phenotypic plasticity framework using a polygenic approach in a prospective depression cohort of primary care attendees with and without histories of severe childhood abuse. <b>Methods</b> Depressive symptoms were assessed at baseline and annually for 5 years post-baseline using the Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) among 288 adult primary care attendees. Twelve polymorphisms in nine genes were genotyped and polygenic phenotypic plasticity allelic load (PAL) calculated. Linear mixed models assessed differences in depressive symptom severity over the 5-year follow-up period by PAL and history of severe childhood abuse. <b>Results</b> A higher PAL conferred greater depressive symptom severity among those with a history of severe childhood abuse but conferred significantly lower symptom severity among those without this history. Importantly, this interaction withstood adjustments for important covariates (e.g., antidepressant use, comorbid anxiety) and was stable over the 5 years of observation. <b>Conclusions</b> Aligned with the phenotypic plasticity framework, depressive symptom severity was dependent on the interaction between PAL and history of severe childhood abuse in a “for better and for worse” manner. Measures of polygenic phenotypic plasticity, such as ours, may serve as a trait marker of sensitivity to negative and potentially positive environmental influences.</p
Use of antidepressants with pharmacogenetic prescribing guidelines in a 10-year depression cohort of adult primary care patients
OBJECTIVE: To describe the usage patterns of antidepressants with published CYP2D6- and CYP2C19-based prescribing guidelines among depressed primary care patients and estimate the proportion of patients taking antidepressants not recommended for them based on their CYP2C19 and CYP2D6 genotype-predicted metabolizer status. METHODS: Medication use and pharmacogenetic testing results were collected on 128 primary care patients enrolled in a 10-year depression cohort study. At each 12-month interval, we calculated the proportion of patients that: (1) reported use of one or more of the 13 antidepressant medications (i.e. amitriptyline, citalopram, escitalopram, clomipramine, desipramine, doxepin, fluvoxamine, imipramine, nortriptyline, paroxetine, sertraline, trimipramine, venlafaxine) with published CYP2D6- and CYP2C19-based prescribing guidelines, (2) were taking an antidepressant that was not recommended for them based on their CYP2C19 and CYP2D6 genotype-predicted metabolizer phenotype, and (3) switched medications from the previous 12-month interval. RESULTS: The annual proportion of individuals taking an antidepressant with a CYP2D6- and CYP2C19-based prescribing guidelines ranged from 45 to 84%. The proportion of participants that used an antidepressant that was not recommended for them, based on available CYP2D6 and CYP2C19 metabolizer phenotype, ranged from 18 to 29% and these individuals tended to switch medications more frequently (10%) compared to their counterparts taking medication aligned with their metabolizer phenotype (6%). CONCLUSION: One-quarter of primary care patients used an antidepressant that was not recommended for them based on CYP2D6- and CYP2C19-based prescribing guidelines and switching medications tended to be more common in this group. Studies to determine the impact of CYP2D6 and CYP2C19 genotyping on reducing gene-antidepressant mismatches are warranted.</p
The brain-derived neurotrophic factor Val66Met polymorphism moderates the effects of childhood abuse on severity of depressive symptoms in a time-dependent manner
Cross-sectional studies have demonstrated that the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) Val66Met single-nucleotide polymorphism moderates the association between exposure to negative life events and depression outcomes. Yet, it is currently unclear whether this moderating effect is applicable to positive life events and if the moderating effect is stable over time. To address these gaps in the literature, we examined clinical and BDNF genotypic data from a 5-year prospective cohort of 310 primary care attendees. Primary care attendees were selected based on existence of depressive symptoms at screening. Depressive symptoms were assessed at baseline and annually for 5 years post-baseline using the Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9). Linear mixed models assessed differences in depressive symptom severity over the 5-year follow-up period by BDNF Val66Met and history of life events, both negative and positive. Analysis identified a novel three-way interaction between the BDNF Val66Met polymorphism, history of severe childhood abuse, and time. Post hoc analysis stratified by time showed a two-way interaction between Val66Met and severe childhood abuse at baseline that was not detectable at any other time point. An interaction between Val66Met and positive life events was not detected. Our longitudinal results suggest that the BDNF Val66Met polymorphism moderates the depressive symptom severity experienced by those with a history of severe childhood abuse but does so in a time-dependent manner. Our results further support the notion that gene-environment-depression interactions are dynamic and highlight the importance of longitudinal assessment of these interactions. Given these novel longitudinal findings; replication is required
