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Dermatologists across Europe underestimate depression and anxiety: results from 3635 dermatological consultations

Authors :
Dalgard, Florence F.J.
Svensson
Gieler, Uwe
Tomas-Aragones, Lucía
Lien, L.
Poot, Françoise
Jemec, Gregor
Misery, Laurent
Szabo, Csanad
Linder, Dennis
Sampogna, Francesca
Evers, Andrea Walburga Maria
Halvorsen, Jon Anders
Balieva, Flora
Szepietowski, Jacek J.C.
Lvov, Andrey
Marron, Servando S.E.
Alturnay, I.K.
Finlay, ANDREW Yule
Salek, S.S.
Kupfer, Jörg
Dalgard, Florence F.J.
Svensson
Gieler, Uwe
Tomas-Aragones, Lucía
Lien, L.
Poot, Françoise
Jemec, Gregor
Misery, Laurent
Szabo, Csanad
Linder, Dennis
Sampogna, Francesca
Evers, Andrea Walburga Maria
Halvorsen, Jon Anders
Balieva, Flora
Szepietowski, Jacek J.C.
Lvov, Andrey
Marron, Servando S.E.
Alturnay, I.K.
Finlay, ANDREW Yule
Salek, S.S.
Kupfer, Jörg
Source :
British journal of dermatology, 179 (2
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: It was recently demonstrated that a significant number of patients with common skin diseases across Europe are clinically depressed and anxious. Studies have shown that physicians not trained as psychiatrists underdiagnose depression. This has not been explored among dermatologists. Objectives: To estimate the concordance between clinical assessment of depression and anxiety by a dermatologist and assessment with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Methods: The study was an observational cross-sectional multicentre study of prevalent cases of skin diseases in 13 countries in Europe. Consecutive patients were recruited in outpatient clinics and filled in questionnaires prior to clinical examination by a dermatologist who reported any diagnosis of skin disease and signs of mood disorders. Results: Analysis of the 3635 consultations showed that the agreement between dermatologist and HADS was poor to fair (lower than 0·4) for all diagnosis categories. The true-positive rate (represented by the percentage of dermatologists recognizing signs of depression or anxiety in patients with depression or anxiety as defined by a HADS value ≥ 11) was 44·0% for depression and 35·6% for anxiety. The true negative rate (represented by the percentage of dermatologists not detecting signs of depression or anxiety in non-depressed or non-anxious patients defined by HADS-value < 11) was 88.8% for depression and 85.7% for anxiety. Conclusions: Dermatologists in Europe tend to underestimate mood disorders. The results suggest that further training for dermatologists to improve their skills in diagnosing depression and anxiety might be appropriate. When present, the psychological suffering of patients with dermatological conditions needs to be addressed.<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
British journal of dermatology, 179 (2
Notes :
No full-text files, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1110016346
Document Type :
Electronic Resource