Results: 21

For: primary care AND meta-analysis

New meta-analysis confirms high suicide rates amongst doctors #WMHD2024

Featured

Today is World Mental Health Day and the theme this year is ‘Prioritising Mental Health in the Workplace’. Clare Gerada reviews a study showing that doctor suicide rates, particularly for females, exceed those of the general population.

[read the full story...]

Oral Cancer – Referral by primary care doctors and dentists

jonathan-borba-iWkA_RzRLuY-unsplash

This review comparing primary care doctors and dentists in the referral of oral cancer included 22 mainly retrospective studies. Doctors refered sliightly more than dentists, typically 50% compared with 40% respectively.

[read the full story...]

Higher doses of antidepressants “not optimal”, according to new review

shutterstock_322041725

Jonathon Tomlinson considers his options as a GP supporting people with depression and complex needs, after reading a new systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis, which suggests that higher doses of antidepressants bring maximum side effects with only marginal gains.

[read the full story...]

Whooley questions have high sensitivity and modest specificity in the detection of depression

3006348550_3bb10dda55_b

Ian Anderson on a recent diagnostic accuracy meta-analysis, which shows that the Whooley questions for depression are effective at ruling out the condition, but that false positives are common.

[read the full story...]

Will it hurt? Chronic pain and psychological functioning

7346674284_9a0eecd26b_o

Kirsten Lawson examines a recent meta-analysis of psychological functioning in people living with chronic pain. She discovers that anxiety is more common than depression in people with chronic pain and that practitioners should prioritise psychological functioning when caring for patients suffering from chronic pain.

[read the full story...]

Mindfulness-based interventions in primary care: absent but successful

20821466289_55ea2e2a21_k

Ioana Cristea appraises a meta-analysis on the effectiveness of mindfulness in primary care. She finds that the evidence is insufficient to draw any reliable conclusions about the actual effectiveness of mindfulness-based interventions in primary care settings.

[read the full story...]

CBT plus taper may help reduce short-term benzodiazepine use

8119248181_d492e64f47_k

John Baker summarises a recent Cochrane systematic review of psychosocial interventions for benzodiazepine harmful use, abuse or dependence.

[read the full story...]

Psychotherapy for depression in primary care. Better evidence please…

shutterstock_255750295

Andrew Shepherd summarises a recent systematic review of the effectiveness of psychotherapy for depression in primary care, which contains a lot of data but leaves him feeling rather deflated.

[read the full story...]

Collaborative care for depression: psychological interventions, alone or in combination with medication, offer additional benefits

collaborative care_blog8

Ioana Cristea reviews a recent systematic review and meta-analysis of collaborative care for depression, looking to identify factors predicting improvements. The study finds that collaborative care successfully improves both patient outcomes and the process of care for depression.

[read the full story...]

Antidepressants for depression in pregnancy: new systematic review says the jury’s still out

Nikki Newhouse summarises a recent US health technology assessment of antidepressants for depression in pregnancy and the postpartum period, which concludes that the evidence remains inconclusive about the benefits and harms of antidepressants for depression in pregnancy.

[read the full story...]