Associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disorders

Objective: To investigate associations between the percentage and severity of mental disorders (MD) and three different primary health care (PHC) strategies in Brazil: traditional care (TC), the Family Health Strategy (FHS), and FHS with shared mental health care (FHS+SC). Methods: Random samples were selected from three different areas of a Brazilian city. Each area was served by a different PHC strategy (TC, FHS, or FHS+SC). Five mental health professionals, blinded to the type of PHC strategy delivered in each area, conducted interviews using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) and other specific instruments to assess the prevalence and severity of MD. Results: 530 subjects were interviewed. The TC strategy was significantly associated with a higher percentage of MD when compared to FHS and FHS+SC. These results were not affected by adjustment for sociodemographic variables. The difference in prevalence of MD between the two FHS areas (with and without SC) was not statistically significant. No significant differences in MD severity were observed across the three PHC strategies. Conclusion: Areas covered by FHS showed a lower percentage of MD than those covered by TC. Presence of SC did not influence the prevalence of MD, suggesting that mental-health training of FHS teams may have minimized the influence of SC.

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Main Authors: Moscovici,Leonardo, Balco,Estenifer M., Degani,Natalia C., Bolsoni,Lívia M., Marques,João M.A., Zuardi,Antonio W.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Psiquiatria 2020
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-44462020000400008
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spelling oai:scielo:S1516-444620200004000082020-08-19Associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disordersMoscovici,LeonardoBalco,Estenifer M.Degani,Natalia C.Bolsoni,Lívia M.Marques,João M.A.Zuardi,Antonio W. Primary health care mental health collaborative care family health strategy Objective: To investigate associations between the percentage and severity of mental disorders (MD) and three different primary health care (PHC) strategies in Brazil: traditional care (TC), the Family Health Strategy (FHS), and FHS with shared mental health care (FHS+SC). Methods: Random samples were selected from three different areas of a Brazilian city. Each area was served by a different PHC strategy (TC, FHS, or FHS+SC). Five mental health professionals, blinded to the type of PHC strategy delivered in each area, conducted interviews using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) and other specific instruments to assess the prevalence and severity of MD. Results: 530 subjects were interviewed. The TC strategy was significantly associated with a higher percentage of MD when compared to FHS and FHS+SC. These results were not affected by adjustment for sociodemographic variables. The difference in prevalence of MD between the two FHS areas (with and without SC) was not statistically significant. No significant differences in MD severity were observed across the three PHC strategies. Conclusion: Areas covered by FHS showed a lower percentage of MD than those covered by TC. Presence of SC did not influence the prevalence of MD, suggesting that mental-health training of FHS teams may have minimized the influence of SC.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAssociação Brasileira de PsiquiatriaBrazilian Journal of Psychiatry v.42 n.4 20202020-08-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-44462020000400008en10.1590/1516-4446-2019-0659
institution SCIELO
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
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databasecode rev-scielo-br
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Moscovici,Leonardo
Balco,Estenifer M.
Degani,Natalia C.
Bolsoni,Lívia M.
Marques,João M.A.
Zuardi,Antonio W.
spellingShingle Moscovici,Leonardo
Balco,Estenifer M.
Degani,Natalia C.
Bolsoni,Lívia M.
Marques,João M.A.
Zuardi,Antonio W.
Associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disorders
author_facet Moscovici,Leonardo
Balco,Estenifer M.
Degani,Natalia C.
Bolsoni,Lívia M.
Marques,João M.A.
Zuardi,Antonio W.
author_sort Moscovici,Leonardo
title Associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disorders
title_short Associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disorders
title_full Associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disorders
title_fullStr Associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disorders
title_full_unstemmed Associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disorders
title_sort associations between primary health care strategies and outcomes of mental disorders
description Objective: To investigate associations between the percentage and severity of mental disorders (MD) and three different primary health care (PHC) strategies in Brazil: traditional care (TC), the Family Health Strategy (FHS), and FHS with shared mental health care (FHS+SC). Methods: Random samples were selected from three different areas of a Brazilian city. Each area was served by a different PHC strategy (TC, FHS, or FHS+SC). Five mental health professionals, blinded to the type of PHC strategy delivered in each area, conducted interviews using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) and other specific instruments to assess the prevalence and severity of MD. Results: 530 subjects were interviewed. The TC strategy was significantly associated with a higher percentage of MD when compared to FHS and FHS+SC. These results were not affected by adjustment for sociodemographic variables. The difference in prevalence of MD between the two FHS areas (with and without SC) was not statistically significant. No significant differences in MD severity were observed across the three PHC strategies. Conclusion: Areas covered by FHS showed a lower percentage of MD than those covered by TC. Presence of SC did not influence the prevalence of MD, suggesting that mental-health training of FHS teams may have minimized the influence of SC.
publisher Associação Brasileira de Psiquiatria
publishDate 2020
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-44462020000400008
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