기사
Mental Disorders Among Young Adults Self-Referred and Referred by Professionals to Specialty Mental Health Care /
- 개인저자
- Ramirez, Adriana ;, Ekselius, Lisa ;, Ramklint, Miaa ;
- 수록페이지
- 1649-1655 p.
- 발행일자
- 2009.12.14
- 출판사
- American Psychiatric Association
초록
[영문]OBJECTIVE: Psychiatric disorders among young adults are prevalent, although a minority seek treatment. The option of direct self-referral to specialty mental health care may lower the help-seeking threshold but may also lead to self-referral by those with symptoms but no diagnosable disorders. This study examined whether differences exist in morbidity and in past use of mental health services between self-referrals to specialty care and those referred by nonpsychiatrist professionals. METHOD:S: Two hundred consecutive young adult outpatients from a medium-sized city in Sweden who visited a specialty psychiatric clinic were assessed with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (axis I and II disorders). Previous mental health contacts were also assessed. RESULTS: A total of 49 patients (25%) were self-referred and 151 (75%) were referred by nonpsychiatrist professionals. Mood disorders and specific phobia were more common among self-referred patients (pqqqlt;.05 for both), but no other significant between-group differences in axis I or II disorders were found. No differences were found in number of current axis I disorders (2.3 for self-referred and 2.2 for the comparison group), number of lifetime diagnoses (2.9 and 2.9), self-reported age at onset (13.6 and 13.5 years), and GAF ratings (54.5 and 54.7). The proportion of patients with no previous mental health contacts was larger in the self-referred group (35% and 18%, pqqqlt;.05). CONCLUSION:S: No evidence was found that the option of direct self-referral to specialty mental health care increased help seeking or led to overuse of care, although the generalizability of findings to other settings is unknown.