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Physical and mental health. Dr Alan Cohen FRCGP. Presentations. The presentation of mental illness with physical symptoms The association between mental illness and physical illness. General Practice. Disorganised/Chaotic Poor at identifying people with mental heath problems
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Physical and mental health Dr Alan Cohen FRCGP
Presentations • The presentation of mental illness with physical symptoms • The association between mental illness and physical illness
General Practice • Disorganised/Chaotic • Poor at identifying people with mental heath problems • Not interested in mental health
General Practice • 280 million consultations annually • 30% have a mental health component • 91% of all mental health problems are managed entirely in primary care • 25% of people with severe mental health problems are managed entirely in primary care
What is General Practice? • The art of general practice is “organising the chaos of the first presentation” • People usually present with somatic symptoms • A more acceptable ticket of entry • Easier to explain • Stigma • Difficult sometimes to distinguish a psychological cause from a physical cause
Medically Unexplained Symptoms • 5 – 10% of all primary care consultations • 50% of out patient attendances • Associated with increased health care consumption • Consultations in primary and secondary care • Increased use of medication • Associated with increased dissatisfaction in the consultation • Both patient and GP
Distinguishing between physical and mental health problems... Reasons to refer: • We don’t know what to do • The diagnosis • The management • We know what to do but can’t do it ourselves • Investigations • Procedures • A second opinion • “The dump” – transfer of care
Prevalence of unexplained symptoms in consecutive attendees at a UK teaching hospital • Clinic % • Chest 59% • Cardiology 56% • Gastroenterology 60% • Rheumatology 58% • Neurology 55% • Dental 49% • Gynaecology 57%
What this means.... • The wrong patient getting the wrong treatment at the wrong time • Costs the NHS a great deal of money • Increases disatisfaction of both patient and doctor
Associations • Common Mental Health Problems • Depression • Anxiety • Severe and Enduring Mental Health Problems • Schizophrenia • Bi-polar disorder
Depression • Diabetes • Ischaemic Heart Disease • Stroke • Other chronic neurological conditions • Cancer
Diabetes • Depression is 2 – 3 times as common in people with diabetes • Associated with • Increased health care consumption • Increased self perceived symptom load • NOT associated with improved glycaemic control • QOF Indicator
Diabetes • Cost of treating co-morbid diabetes and depression is 250% • Cost of all treatment is 400% • Proportion of NHS hospital expenditure on diabetes is 10% of total spend
Ischaemic Heart Disease • Depression is 2 – 3 times as common in people with ischaemic heart disease • The best predictor of death following MI is the presence of depression • QOF indicator
Ischaemic Heart Disease • 40% of admissions can be prevented by providing psychological treatments • 50% of revascularisation procedures (CABG and PTCA) can be prevented by providing psychological treatments
Anxiety • Anxiety occurs in 25% of people with COPD • People with COPD make up the largest group of “frequent flyers” • A fear of becoming of short of breath, or actually becoming short of breath?
Schizophrenia and Bi-polar disorder • Few Papers • Most studies are by Psychiatrists, about in-patient populations • There are some large epidemiological studies which look at co-morbidity • There are no papers on the characteristics (physical or mental) of the SEMI not in contact with the secondary services
Characteristics • In a study* of 101 patients in the community • 26 were obese (BMI > 30) • 53 were current smokers • 11 were hypertensive (BP systolic >160, diastolic >100) • SMR 150 (all causes)** *Kendrick 1996 B J Psych **Harris and Barraclough 1998 B J Psych
SMR by cause of death • Respiratory disease • SMR 250 • Infectious disease • SMR 500 • Cardiovascular disease • SMR 250
Characteristics: Health Promotion • Consultation rate 13 -14* • Data that is recorded • smoking 23% • BP 38% • Cx smear 28% • Mammography 8% • Alcohol use 20% • Weight 27% • Cholesterol 2.5% *Burns and Cohen BJGP 1998
Schizophrenia co-morbidity • Cardiovascular disease – lifestyle • Smoking: 80-90% are smokers • Respiratory disease - lifestyle • Diabetes – lifestyle, medication, genetics • Hepatitis C and HIV - lifestyle • Drug related movement disorders - iatrogenic • Cancer colon - ??? • Rheumatoid Arthritis ???
Bipolar co-morbidity • As for schizophrenia plus: • Smoking: 25 – 30% are smokers • Drug related thyroid & renal disorder - Lithium
What to do? Burns and Kendrick* recommend • “A proactive approach, closed questions for physical symptoms, and regular screening” • Examine BP, chest, skin, side effects and urine analysis • Investigations: CXR, ECG, FBC, ESR, TFTs • Vision and Hearing tests * Psychiatry and General Practice Today 1994 (RCGP/RCPsych)
(More) What to do? GP Guide from the Institute of Psychiatry* • BP, IHD, cerebro-vascular disease • Chronic Bronchitis, infections • Obesity • Chiropody, vision and hearing problems • diabetes mellitus, thyroid disease • Drug side-effects • Family planning including cervical smears • Smoking, alcohol, exercise
(Even more) What to do NICE guidance: • physical health is the responsibility of primary care • Registers are needed • Regular physical health checks, including endocrine disorders, cardiovascular disorders, life style risk factors • Explicit recording of responsibility to monitor health care
What GPs get paid to do... • Do you really want to know???
A brief overview of the GP contract Describes three levels of care: • Essential care • Has to be provided by all general practices • Additional care • May be provided in addition to essential services (vaccinations etc) • Enhanced care • Provides care above and beyond that which is considered to be “essential”
Essential Care • Incentives exist to deliver high quality, evidence based outcomes for essential care • The Quality and Outcome Framework (QOF) • Points based incentive system • Delivers a total of 1000 points • 655 points are available for delivering clinical outcomes • Outcomes divided into a number of clinical domains • “Points means ££££££ !!”
CHD Heart Failure Stroke and TIA BP DM COPD CKD AF LD Asthma Dementia Depression Mental Health Obesity Smoking Palliative care Cancer Hypothyroidism Epilepsy The clinical areas covered
Mental Health Domain • Delivers a total of 39 points (out of 655) • Specifies a particular set of clinical diagnoses to be included in the “register” • Schizophrenia • Bi-polar disorder • Other psychoses • Excludes dementia, childhood behaviour disorders etc
Mental Health Domain 2nd Indicator (MH9) The percentage of patients with schizophrenia, bipolar affective disorder and other psychoses with a review recorded in the preceding 15 months. In the review there should be evidence that the patient has been offered routine health promotion and prevention advice appropriate to their age, gender and health status What does this mean in practice?
Mental Health Domain • The user/patient is called for an appointment • Some interventions are offered • There is not yet a requirement as to which investigations/interventions should be offered.
Proposed changes • Specify that the following interventions are recorded for everybody on the electronic list: • Blood pressure recorded • Peak flow recorded • Urine analysis/fasting blood glucose recorded • Height and weight recorded (BMI recorded) • Smoking habits recorded • Drug and alcohol use • Flu vaccination offered annually
Further proposals • Cervical screening as appropriate • Drug and alcohol advice as appropriate • Smoking cessation advice as appropriate • Should this group be offered regular screening for bowel cancer – a priority group for bowel screening programme? • Should this group be screened for Hepatitis C and HIV status?
In Summary • Distinguishing mental from physical illness is not straightforward • Managing the mental health problems of people with long term conditions will have a cost benefit • Managing people with MUS will have a cost benefit • There are significant associations between people with SMI and physical health problems
Thank you Alan.cohen@scmh.org.uk