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Psychiatric Illness in General Practice: A Detailed Study Using a New Method of Case Identification

Br Med J 1970; 2 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.5707.439 (Published 23 May 1970) Cite this as: Br Med J 1970;2:439
  1. D. P. Goldberg,
  2. B. Blackwell

    Abstract

    A self-administered questionary (the General Health Questionnaire) aimed at detecting current psychiatric disturbance was given to 553 consecutive attenders to a general practitioner's surgery. A sample of 200 of these patients was given an independent assessment of their mental state by a psychiatrist using a standardized psychiatric interview. Over 90% of the patients were correctly classified as “well” or “ill” by the questionary, and the correlation between questionary score and the clinical assessment of severity of disturbance was found to be +0·80.

    The “conspicuous psychiatric morbidity” of a suburban general practice assessed by a general practitioner who was himself a psychiatrist and validated against independent psychiatric assessment was found to be 20%. “Hidden psychiatric morbidity” was found to account for one-third of all disturbed patients. These patients were similar to patients with “conspicuous illnesses” in terms both of degree of disturbance and the course of their illnesses at six-month follow-up, but were distinguished by their attitude to their illness and by usually presenting a physical symptom to the general practitioner.

    When 87 patients who had been assessed as psychiatric cases at the index consultation were called back for follow-up six months later, two-thirds of them were functioning in the normal range. Frequency of attendance at the surgery in the six months following index consultation was found to have only a modest relationship to severity of psychiatric disturbance.

    It is argued that minor affective illnesses and physical complaints often accompany each other and usually have a good prognosis.

    Footnotes

    • * An abridged version of the Charles Oliver Hawthorne Prize Essay, 1969.