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Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology
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Psychiatric Screening in Geriatric Primary Care: Should It Be for Depression Alone?

Jennifer D. Lish, PhD

Department of Psychiatry (Drs. Lish and Kuzma, and Mr. Plescia), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Division of General Medicine, (Drs. Lush, Farber, and Kuzma), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Department of Internal Medicine, (Dr. Farber), Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Mark Zimmerman, MD

Department of Psychiatry (Drs. Lish and Kuzma, and Mr. Plescia), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Division of General Medicine, (Drs. Lush, Farber, and Kuzma), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Department of Internal Medicine, (Dr. Farber), Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Neil J. Farber, MD

Department of Psychiatry (Drs. Lish and Kuzma, and Mr. Plescia), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Division of General Medicine, (Drs. Lush, Farber, and Kuzma), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Department of Internal Medicine, (Dr. Farber), Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

David Lush, MD

Department of Psychiatry (Drs. Lish and Kuzma, and Mr. Plescia), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Division of General Medicine, (Drs. Lush, Farber, and Kuzma), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Department of Internal Medicine, (Dr. Farber), Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Mary Ann Kuzma, MD

Department of Psychiatry (Drs. Lish and Kuzma, and Mr. Plescia), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Division of General Medicine, (Drs. Lush, Farber, and Kuzma), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Department of Internal Medicine, (Dr. Farber), Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Gary Plescia, MA

Department of Psychiatry (Drs. Lish and Kuzma, and Mr. Plescia), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Division of General Medicine, (Drs. Lush, Farber, and Kuzma), Medical College of Pennsylvania; Department of Internal Medicine, (Dr. Farber), Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Depression in the elderly is highly prevalent, associated with functional disability and increased medical costs, and treatable; however, it is infrequently recognized and treated. The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research has advocated, therefore, increased case-finding efforts for depression in primary geriatric care. Anxiety, substance, and somatoform disorders in the elderly are similarly prevalent, associated with disability and cost, treatable, and also infrequently detected and treated. We believe that psychiatric case-finding in geriatric primary care should attend to these disorders, therefore, as well as to depression. In the present study, we examined whether the association between depressive and nondepressive forms of psychopathology was similar in geriatric and nongeriatric medical patients. We also examined the relationship between each type of pathology and health care utilization and global ratings of physical and mental health. In a VA hospital general medical outpatient clinic, 508 patients completed the SCREENER, which is a brief self-report questionnaire that screens for a range of psychiatric disorders, along with a self-report questionnaire regarding subjective health and medical care utilization. Of these patients, 98% were male, and the median age was 63 years. Patients aged 63 and over were compared to younger patients. In both geriatric and younger adult patients, we found substantial comorbidity between depressive and nondepressive forms of pathology. Moreover, in both age groups, there were significant associations between both depressive and nondepressive symptoms and fair-to-poor self-rated physical and mental health and increased medical care utilization. Approximately half of the cases of nondepressive disorders in the elderly were not comorbid with depression, and thus would not have been detected by screening for depression alone. Therefore, psychiatric case finding in primary care of geriatric males should be directed at anxiety, substance, and somatoform disorders, as well as at depression, for treatment resources to be triaged to maximally decrease morbidity and cost.

Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology, Vol. 8, No. 3, 141-153 (1995)
DOI: 10.1177/089198879500800301


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