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Depression treatment adequacy varies by symptom severity

posted Saturday, 7 January 2006

Depression Treatment Adequacy Varies by Symptom Severity

Primary care physicians may be better at treating depressive symptoms when they prescribe certain antidepressants as opposed to others, new findings suggest.

Patients with "almost absent" or severe depression symptoms were more likely to receive adequate depression treatment in primary care settings than were those with mild or moderate symptoms, according to one study.

When depressive symptoms were either almost absent or extremely severe, 91 percent of patients were adequately managed by primary care physicians.

But when symptoms were mild or moderate, just 69 percent of primary care physicians received an adequate rating for the treatment, according to the findings, which appear in the December 2005 Psychiatric Services.


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© 2006 American Psychiatric Association

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