Physical symptom attributions: a defining characteristic of somatoform disorders? - 13/03/15
, Eva Ørnbøl, M.Sc., Per K. Fink, Ph.D.Abstract |
Objectives |
We examined whether primary care patients were more likely to perceive a current health problem as ‘physical illness only’ as opposed to entailing psychological difficulties if they had a comorbid somatoform disorder compared to patients who had (a) both comorbid somatoform disorder and anxiety/depression or (b) comorbid anxiety and/or depression, and a reference group of (c) patients with well-defined physical disease. We examined whether attributions predicted future health expenditures.
Methods |
A total of 1209 of 1785 patients completed questions on patient-perceived illness. The physicians diagnosed the current health problem. A stratified subsample was interviewed using the Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry. Health expenditure was obtained from registers for a 2-year period.
Results |
The belief that the current health problem was only physical was endorsed by 86% of patients presenting physical disease, 58% of patients with somatoform disorders, 29% of patients with both somatoform disorders and anxiety/depression and 24% of patients with anxiety or depressive disorders (χ2=269.2, df=3, P<.0001). In a multiple regression model, a ‘physical illness only’ perception predicted lower health expenditures [β=−0.31, 95% confidence interval (−0.55; −0.07), P=.013].
Conclusions |
The prevalent assumption that physical symptom attributions are a central aspect in somatoform disorders is not supported by the current study.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Causal attributions, Anxiety disorders, Depressive disorders, Somatoform disorders, Health expenditures
Plan
| ☆ | Conflicts of interest and source of funding: The study has been supported by grants from The Danish Medical Research Council (grant 2028-00-0007) and the Health Service of Aarhus County (project number 0871). The funding sources had no role in the study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, writing of the paper or the decision to submit the paper for publication. |
| ☆☆ | Competing interests: none. |
Vol 37 - N° 2
P. 147-152 - mars 2015 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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