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A workshop in 3 parts. Characterising the emotional stateDetermining the relationship between emotional state and physical illnessConsidering intervention strategies in the general hospital(
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1. Leeds Institute of Health Sciences Mood disorder and physical illness: impact and interventions Allan House Professor of liaison psychiatry
Academic Unit of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences
2. A workshop in 3 parts Characterising the emotional state
Determining the relationship between emotional state and physical illness
Considering intervention strategies in the general hospital
(..and something interspersed to keep the delta waves at bay)
3. A hierarchy of mental disorders (after Foulds)
4. A hierarchy of mental disorders (after DSM or ICD)
6. Characterising emotional disorder: three approaches
Distress as symptom burden
Common mental disorders as specific syndromes
The central importance of individual features (such as cognitions or behaviours)
7. Some common measures of symptom burden
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale: HAD 14 items
General Health Questionnaire: GHQ 12, 28, 30, 60 items
Beck Depression Inventory: BDI 21 items
Center for Epidemiological Studies: CES-D 20 items
9. Leeds Institute of Health Sciences
10. Trying to differentiate states of distress How many factors?
Undifferentiated distress
Depression
Anxiety
Somatoform disorder (somatic distress)
12. Major depression: depressed mood or loss of interest or pleasure
and during the same 2 week period >3 from:
Weight loss or weight gain, or marked change in appetite
Insomnia or hypersomnia
Agitation or retardation
Fatigue or loss of energy
Worthlessness or guilt
Poor concentration or indecisiveness
Thoughts of death or suicidal thinking
13. Trying to differentiate syndromes How many syndromes?
Depressive disorders: major depression; minor depression; dysthymia; adjustment disorders
Anxiety disorders: generalised anxiety disorder; panic disorder; social phobia; agoraphobia; specific monophobias
Somatoform disorders: symptom states (pain; fatigue); hypochondria/health anxiety; conversion disorder
15. What cognitions really count? Is it the presence of negative ones?
Hopelessness
Sense of personal worthlessness
Sense of life not worth living
Suicidal ideas
Or the absence of positive ones?
Positive forward directed thinking
Optimism
Ikigai
Pleasure, or enjoyment in life
16. Course of depressive symptoms after stroke
17. The example of maternal mental health: the usual problems
Postnatal depression discussed as if its a disease (like post-stroke depression)
Somatic distress written out of the picture (Edinburgh postnatal depression scale)
Very little attention to depression-congruent cognitions
18. Mothers in Born in Bradford have GHQ-28 administered at booking GTT;
Postnatal depression discussed as if its a disease
GHQ-28 a 28 item measure of symptom burden
Somatic distress written out of the picture (Edinburgh postnatal depression scale)
GHQ-28 includes somatic sub-scale
Very little attention to depression-congruent cognitions
GHQ-28 depression subscale has mainly cognitive items
19. Depressive symptoms in GHQ-28: Items in the GHQ-D subscale thinking of yourself as a worthless person
life is entirely hopeless
life isnt worth living
wishing you were dead and away from it all
at times you couldnt do anything because your nerves were too bad
idea of taking your own life kept coming into your mind
possibility that you might make away with yourself
20. Some questions from BiB: for all women and by ethnicity
The relation between emotional distress and somatic distress in pregnancy
The relation between self-reported emotional and somatic distress and conventionally-defined mental disorder (CIS-R)
The prevalence of negative cognitions in pregnancy
The meaning given to symptoms by women in pregnancy
21. Some questions to discuss
What questions should we invite non-specialists to ask:
routinely
of patients in difficulty with their disease
What standardised measures should we invite non-specialists to use, and how should they use the responses?
note: the lesson from QoF in the UK
On what aspects of the presentation should we concentrate as psychiatrists?
23. What sorts of experience are stressful?Characteristics of the event
imminent and strong demands
life transitions
ambiguity
undesirability
uncontrollability
24. What sorts of experience are stressful?Characteristics of the event
Loss
Threat
Dilemma
Note an experience can be both a loss and a gain.
25. Components of the ILLNESS REPRESENTATION identity
cause
consequences
course (natural history)
cure/controllability
26. Illness Identity
Pain
Nausea
Breathlessness
Weight Loss
Fatigue
Stiff joints Sore Eyes
Headaches
Upset Stomach
Sleep difficulties
Dizziness
Loss of Strength
27. Cause
A germ or virus caused my illness.
Diet played a major role in causing my illness.
Pollution of the environment caused my illness.
My illness is hereditary - it runs in my family.
It was just by chance that I became ill.
Stress was a major factor in causing my illness.
28. Consequences
My illness is a serious condition
My illness has had major consequences on my life
My illness has become easier to live with
My illness has not had much effect on my life.
My illness has strongly affected the way others see me.
29. Course (timeline)
My illness will last a short time
My illness is likely to be permanent rather than temporary
My illness will last a long time
30. Control/Cure
My illness will improve in time
There is a lot which I can do to control my symptoms.
There is very little that can be done to improve my illness.
My treatment will be effective in curing my illness.
Recovery from my illness is largely dependant on chance or fate.
What I do can determine whether my illness gets better or worse.
31. Two main components of the earlyexperience of physical illness Perceptions of disease and disability:
Controllability
Locus of control
Sense of coherence
Helplessness/hopelessness Perceptions of healthcare:
Quality
Co-ordination
Continuity
Information received
Satisfaction with care
33. Some influences on illness perceptions
Medical communication
Personal (typically family) experience
Subjective norms (widely held beliefs)
gender differences eg genetic causes
defensive biases eg in perception of risks
34. The social network
Quantity [ size , contact]
Quality [intimacy, composition]
36. Stress and illness: the response of others Closing in
its our problem now
Drifting away
Infantilising
Ill look after you
Depersonalising
Does he take sugar?
37. Some questions to discuss Do illnesses have any unique or relatively specific characteristics as life events or difficulties?
Should we think less about illness representations and more about healthcare representations? And if so what are the main components of the latter?
Does illness create particular interpersonal problems, or needs for social support? Or can we continue to borrow our thinking from other areas of psychiatry?
38. Lessons for assessment You need to know about both burden and specific symptoms, so:
- routine use of a symptom measure
- follow up with an interview
You need to know about persistence of symptoms, so:
- ask about symptoms before illness, and chart trajectory after illness
You need to know how the patient understands symptoms in relation to:
- life before illness;
- illness;
- experience of treatment of illness
You need to know what impact on health-related behaviours depression is having
You need to know how others in the social network are responding
40. Stepped care and depression: NICE Guidelines
42. Average recovery rates in reviews of antidepressant v placebo RCTs
43. Evidence for antidepressants in psychiatric practice: a summary Most RCTs provide outcomes at 6-8 weeks
Total dropouts at 6-8 weeks are 30% for TCA, and 27% for SSRI
Placebo response is 30-40%
AD response is 50-60% with no clear difference between classes of AD
44. Leeds Institute of Health Sciences
46. Total and class- specific
prescriptions of
antidepressants
(millions)
1975-98.
48. NICE guidelines for non-specialist management of depression in primary care Step 2
Watchful waiting*
Guided self-help (manual-based)*
Computerised CBT
Exercise
Brief psychological intervention++
Step 3
Medication
Social support
49. People have their own ways of coping
1 AIMS problem-focussed
emotion-focussed
2 STYLE approach/avoidance
active/passive
3 TECHNIQUES
cognitive e.g. reframing, seeking knowledge
behavioural e.g. exercising, drinking
emotional e.g. crying, grieving
52. Some questions for discussion How can we develop and implement policies for more rational prescribing of antidepressants in physical illness?
Where is the best pay-off likely to be in Step 2 and Step 3 interventions for depression associated with physical illness?
Is there a way of organising our specialist services so that we offer something between the consultation/referral model and the liaison model?
53. A plan to curb therapeutic zeal? Watchful waiting 1/3 depressive episodes will recover spontaneously or with placebo treatment within a month
Dont start an AD without a clear (written) stopping protocol
Only use AD in moderate or severe depression and only as part of a therapeutic programme.
54. Depression and stroke: what should be on offer? Something for everyone (on the team)
Problem-solving
Activity scheduling/behavioural activation
Motivational interviewing
Strong on engagement/acceptability
Practical/pragmatic
Easy to learn
55. Two levels of service? A team training programme
Activity scheduling
Motivational interviewing
Problem-solving
A specialist referral policy
CBT
Interpersonal therapy/family therapy
CAT