Abstract

BackgroundAnxiety disorders are common and are frequently not diagnosed accurately in primary care. Our aim was to determine the knowledge gaps of general practitioners (GPs) in the diagnosis and treatment of anxiety disorders by using vignettes.MethodsA cross-sectional survey was completed with 255 primary care physicians (response rate 59.4%) in Manisa, a city in western Turkey. From the postal questionnaire, information on working experience, postgraduate education in psychiatry, the interests of the physicians in psychiatry were obtained. The physicians' diagnosis and treatment preferences for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), social phobia (SP), and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) were determined through clinical vignettes prepared for data collection.ResultsTwo hundred and twenty-seven (89.0%) out of 255 GPs included the diagnosis of obsessive compulsive disorder in their differential diagnosis; however, the rates for social phobia and generalized anxiety disorder were 69.4% (n = 177) and 22.3% (n = 57), respectively. GPs with a post-graduate education on psychiatry diagnosed vignettes more accurately for OCD (p = 0.04). For all three cases, GPs mostly preferred a combination therapy including psychotherapy and psycho-pharmacotherapy. The referral rate to a psychiatrist was between 23.1 and 30.6%. The percentages of the prescription of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI) in accurate diagnosis were 59.3 for social phobia, 33.3 for GAD, and 55.5 for OCD.ConclusionsThere is a gap of knowledge in GPs, which leads to poor recognition and management of anxiety disorders in primary care. Effective interventions including post-graduate education and updated guidelines on anxiety disorders should be planned and implemented with their assessments by vignettes.

Highlights

  • Anxiety disorders are common and are frequently not diagnosed accurately in primary care

  • Patients with anxiety disorders increasingly consult primary care units and this is reflected in the prevalence of anxiety disorders (14.6-19.0%), social phobia (2.6-12.3%), generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) (2.8-13.2%), and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) (2.0%) in primary care [6,7,8,9,10]

  • The aim of this study was to examine the general practitioners (GPs)' knowledge of anxiety disorders by clinical vignettes which are commonly used in the studies of depression and psychosis, and to our knowledge, which have not been done with anxiety disorders before

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Summary

Introduction

Anxiety disorders are common and are frequently not diagnosed accurately in primary care. Anxiety disorders are the most common disorders with a 12-month prevalence changing between 2.4 and 18.2% among the general population [1]. For the subgroups of anxiety disorders, the prevalence is 0.6-5.2% for social phobia (SP), 0.5-3.8% for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), and 0.3-4.0% for obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) [2,3,4,5]. Patients with anxiety disorders increasingly consult primary care units and this is reflected in the prevalence of anxiety disorders (14.6-19.0%), social phobia (2.6-12.3%), GAD (2.8-13.2%), and OCD (2.0%) in primary care [6,7,8,9,10]. In Turkey, we do not have population-based prevalence studies for subgroups of mental disorders such as anxiety disorders, we know that more than 17% of the adult population has certain mental health problems. It was estimated that only 13% of all the mentally ill patients could receive help for their problems [11]

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