Psychiatric morbidity among patients attending a rural non-communicable disease clinic

Abstract Background The presence of psychiatric illness among patients with physical illnesses leads to poor treatment adherence, poor lifestyle, increased cost of treatment, poor quality of life, worsening of physical illness, work absenteeism, increased hospital visits, poor self-care and higher m...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of public health 2020-09, Vol.30 (Supplement_5)
Hauptverfasser: Sangwan, G, Mehra, A, Grover, S, Avasthi, A
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background The presence of psychiatric illness among patients with physical illnesses leads to poor treatment adherence, poor lifestyle, increased cost of treatment, poor quality of life, worsening of physical illness, work absenteeism, increased hospital visits, poor self-care and higher mortality. The study evaluated the prevalence of cognitive impairment and psychiatric morbidity in non-communicable disease patients. The study highlights that NCD patients should be provided information about the development of cognitive impairment in order to prevent it. Methods It was a cross-sectional study conducted among the patients attending the non-communicable disease clinic of a rural community health centre run in collaboration with the Postgraduate Institute Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh. We registered 124 patients after obtaining written informed consent. Instruments: Hindi Mental Status Examination (HMSE), Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Generalized anxiety disorder-7 (GAD-7) scale. Analysis of covariance was applied to see the relationship between the domain of the HMSE and NCDs. Results The mean age of the participants was 55.5 years (SD-11.9, Range-26-90). A little more than one third (N = 48, 38.7%) were diagnosed with hypertension only, one-sixth (N = 22; 17.7%) were diagnosed with diabetes mellitus only, and 54 (43.5%) patients were diagnosed with both hypertension and diabetes mellitus. A slightly more than one-third of the study participants were diagnosed with depressive disorder (N = 44, 35.5%), and 29% (N = 36) of the participants were diagnosed with an anxiety disorder. About one-fourth of patients with NCD have cognitive impairment and 39.51% have psychiatric morbidity. Conclusions The prevalence of cognitive impairment is higher among patients of NCD with psychiatric morbidity. Patients with NCDs should be routinely screened for cognitive functioning and provided information about the development of cognitive impairment. Key messages Because of high prevalence of cognitive impairment and psychiatric morbidity in NCD patients, patients should be provided information to prevent it. There is a need to screen NCD patients routinely for cognitive functioning, and provide them information to prevent cognitive impairment.
ISSN:1101-1262
1464-360X
DOI:10.1093/eurpub/ckaa166.1042