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Prevalence of Depression in RCRMC Family Medicine Residency

Prevalence of Depression in RCRMC Family Medicine Residency . Bob Chiang, M.D., Kris Lee, M.D., Ted Lee, M.D., Laurie Wellman, Ph.D. June 2009, Moreno Valley, CA. INTRODUCTION. Depression is a major public health problem and a leading predictor of functional disability and mortality.

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Prevalence of Depression in RCRMC Family Medicine Residency

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  1. Prevalence of Depression in RCRMC Family Medicine Residency Bob Chiang, M.D., Kris Lee, M.D., Ted Lee, M.D., Laurie Wellman, Ph.D. June 2009, Moreno Valley, CA

  2. INTRODUCTION • Depression is a major public health problem and a leading predictor of functional disability and mortality. • The annual economic consequences of depression have been estimated at 83 billion dollars in the US.6 • Prevalence of Depression14 • General population 4.5% • Medical students/residents 15%

  3. Prevalence of Depression Survey from 2,000 medical students and residents Goebert, D. Acad Med. 2009 Feb;84(2):236-41

  4. Prevalence of Depression Goebert, D. Acad Med. 2009 Feb;84(2):236-41

  5. Prevalence of Depression Goebert, D. Acad Med. 2009 Feb;84(2):236-41

  6. INTRODUCTION • A stressful environment is a known risk factor for depression; yet there is no protocol established for early detection of and intervention for depression in family medicine residencies. • Depression has been correlated to increased medical errors in pediatrics residents in a prospective cohort study. 13

  7. Suicide in Physicians • Depression in interns leads to suicidal ideation, marital problems, inability to work and thoughts of leaving medicine.9 • Physicians who make suicide attempts are much more likely than nonphysicians to succeed. 12

  8. Drug Abuse in Physicians Survey from 1,785 residents Am J Psychiatry. 1992;149(Oct):10

  9. Drug Abuse in Physicians Am J Psychiatry. 1992;149(Oct):10

  10. BACKGROUND • DSM-IV Diagnostic Criteria for Major Depressive Episode7 • 5 (or more) symptoms present during the same 2-week period, change from previous functioning; at least 1symptoms is either depressed mood or loss of interest or pleasure. 1. depressed mood most of the day, nearly every day. 2. markedly diminished interest or pleasure in all, or almost all, activities most of the day, nearly every day 3. significant weight loss when not dieting or weight gain or decrease or increase in appetite nearly every day. 4. insomnia or hypersomnia nearly every day 5. psychomotor agitation or retardation nearly every day 6. fatigue or loss of energy nearly every day 7. feelings of worthlessness or excessive or inappropriate guilt nearly every day 8. diminished ability to think or concentrate, or indecisiveness, nearly every day 9. recurrent thoughts of death (not just fear of dying), recurrent suicidal ideation without a specific plan, or a suicide attempt or a specific plan for committing suicide

  11. BACKGROUND • Personal Health Questionnaire (PHQ)15 • 3-page self-administered questionnaire • well validated in two large studies • 9 item depression scale (PHQ-9) • used as a diagnostic instrument • used as a depression severity tool • possible scores ranging from 0 to 27 • higher scores are correlated with other measures of depression severity

  12. BACKGROUND

  13. OBJECTIVE • Screen for depression among family medicine residents and to demonstrate similarities or differences among different year level.

  14. METHOD • RCRMC family medicine residents of all year levels were included in the study. • In 2009, trainees were asked to complete the PHQ-9 survey. • The survey could be conducted on-line through a survey website or on paper turned in anonymously. • Confidentiality was guaranteed: the only requested identifier was PGY level.

  15. RESULTS • 23 of 27 residents participated in the study. • 9 interns, 8 PGY-2, 6 PGY-3 • 1 of 23 residents met criteria of clinical depression. • Positive screening 3.8% • No resident admitted to suicidal ideation.

  16. RESULTS • Respondents admitted to 0-8 symptoms of depression. (Mean 0.956, SD 1.89). • PHQ-9 total scores ranged from 0-18. (Mean 4.22, SD 4.32). • One-way ANOVA analysis showed that there was no significant difference in the total depressive score among the different PGY levels. (p = 0.456)

  17. TOTAL SCORES

  18. ONE-WAY ANOVA

  19. DISCUSSION • Prevalence of depression in general population 4.5%-5.4%14 • Less participation in each higher training level (also demonstrated in other studies 16) • Residents with depressive symptoms may have opted not to participate • High number of depressive symptoms associated with poor health and impaired functioning, whether or not the criteria for a diagnosis of major depression are met14

  20. DISCUSSION • Most students and interns with major depression do not seek treatment. 9 • Only half of depressed residents seemed aware of their depression; only a few were being treated. 13 • Only 29% of depressed people report contacting mental health services.14 • Of those with severe depression, only 39% reported contact.14

  21. Riverside County Resources • Handouts of Riverside County Employee Assistance Services given during orientation • EAS rep came to discuss availability of services. • Self-referral or referral by supervisor/co-worker • EAS only available during limited weekday business hours. • Yearly “Mental Health Month” emails to all county employees • “Mental Health Month” activities at outside campus, >20 miles away.

  22. RCRMC Resident Resources • Once yearly retreat with behavioral scientist – 2-3 hours • Once quarterly review with faculty advisor – 5-20 minutes • Once monthly “Resident Support” meetings – 30-45 minutes

  23. DISCUSSION • A retrospective review of different interventions for burnout in residents/ medical students: • Workshops, resident assistance program, self-care intervention, support groups, didactic sessions, stress-management/coping training, breathing exercises: alone or in various combinations. • None achieved an A-level SORT rating.15

  24. COMMON STRESSORS • Heavy workload • Sleep deprivation • Difficult patients • Poor learning environments • Financial concerns • Information overload • Career planning Goebert, D. Acad Med. 2009 Feb;84(2):236-41

  25. THE INTERN’S PSYCHE Peterlini M, Med Educ. 2002 Jan;36(1):66-72.

  26. PERCEIVED STRESSORS Kirsling RA, Psychol Rep. 1989 Oct;65(2):355-66

  27. COPING METHODS Kirsling RA, Psychol Rep. 1989 Oct;65(2):355-66

  28. RECOMMENDATIONS • Areas for Intervention • Encourage self-knowledge • Encourage seeking help • Foster atmosphere of communication • Multiple methodologies (discussion, lecture, readings, physical and mental exercises)

  29. RECOMMENDATIONS • Active Surveillance • Various groups (by class, by gender, with different faculty or residents) • Formal/informal • Frequent repetition

  30. RECOMMENDATIONS • Work to relieve stressors • Sleep deprivations • Poor learning environment • Active teach/model coping methods • Encourage support among residents • Active involvement of attendings

  31. FOR FURTHER STUDY • Longitudinal survey of current FM residents • Monitor for change • Among the different years of training • Throughout the year for each class of residents • Comparison of different FM programs in the local area

  32. CONCLUSION “It is simply unacceptable for new—or more established— physicians and other health professionals to be in such great pain. It is improper for us to sacrifice our own health, family, and community in order to care for others. Part of our calling is to relieve suffering. We cannot relieve the suffering of others if we, ourselves, are suffering. Poets and musicians may function better when they are melancholy, but physicians do not. “We need to take care of ourselves. That is not selfish. It is smart, and no one else will do it for us. We also need to take care of our residents. Who else will? What message are we giving when we ignore them? We need to show residents and each other that they and we matter.” 16

  33. REFERENCES • Goebert D, Thompson D, Takeshita J, Beach C, Bryson P, Ephgrave K, Kent A, Kunkel M, Schechter J, Tate J. Depressive symptoms in medical students and residents: a multischool study. Acad Med. 2009 Feb;84(2):236-41. • Hendrie HC, Clair DK, Brittain HM, Fadul PE. A study of anxiety/depressive symptoms of medical students, house staff, and their spouses/partners. J Nerv Ment Dis. 1990 Mar;178(3):204-7. • Dyrbye LN, Thomas MR, Massie FS, Power DV, Eacker A, Harper W, Durning S, Moutier C, Szydlo DW, Novotny PJ, Sloan JA, Shanafelt TD. Burnout and suicidal ideation among U.S. medical students. • Baldassin S, Alves TC, de Andrade AG, Nogueira Martins LA. The characteristics of depressive symptoms in medical students during medical education and training: a cross-sectional study. BMC Med Educ. 2008 Dec 11;8:60. • Rosal MC, Ockene IS, Ockene JK, Barrett SV, Ma Y, Hebert JR. A longitudinal study of students' depression at one medical school. Acad Med. 1997 Jun;72(6):542-6. • Depression: Clinical manifestations and diagnosis. UpToDate – Online. • DSM-IV. American Psychiatric Association. (1994). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.). Washington, DC. • Kroenke K, Spitzer RL. The PHQ-9: a new depression diagnostic and severity measure. Psychiatr Annals 2002;32: 509-21.

  34. REFERENCES • Editorial. Major Depression During Medical Training. JAMA, Nov 4, 1998, Vol 260, No. 17 • Peterlini M, Tibério IF, Saadeh A, Pereira JC, Martins MA. Anxiety and depression in the first year of medical residency training. Med Educ. 2002 Jan;36(1):66-72. • Kirsling RA, Kochar MS, Chan CH. An evaluation of mood states among first-year residents. Psychol Rep. 1989 Oct;65(2):355-66. • Schernhammer E. Taking their own lives -- the high rate of physician suicide. N Engl J Med. 2005 Jun 16;352(24):2473-6 • Fahrenkof AM, et al. Rates of medication errors among depressed and burnt out residents: prospective cohort study. BMJ 2008;336;488-491. • Pratt LA, Brody DJ. NCHS Data Brief: Depression in the United States Household Population, 2005-2006. Number 7, September 2008 http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/databriefs/db07.htm. Accessed 5/23/09 • McCray LW, et al. Resident Physician Burnout: Is There Hope? Fam Med 2008;40(9):626-32. • Clever LH. Who Is Sicker: Patients—or Residents? Residents’ Distress and the Care of Patients. Ann Intern Med. 2002;136:391-393.

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