Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Physicians’ Attitudes and Beliefs About Depression

Studies have long shown that some patients receive less than optimal care for depression in primary care settings. However, few studies have uncovered factors that predict and explain this deficiency. The authors administered a survey to 408 primary care physicians. They examined how physicians’ att...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lisa M. Hooper PhD, Steven A. Epstein MD, Lixin Qu MS, Natalie J. Hannah MA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2011-04-01
Series:Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2150131910387647
id doaj-e9b122c67423480a9a996f8795b5b914
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e9b122c67423480a9a996f8795b5b9142020-11-25T03:15:03ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Primary Care & Community Health2150-13192150-13272011-04-01210.1177/2150131910387647Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Physicians’ Attitudes and Beliefs About DepressionLisa M. Hooper PhD0Steven A. Epstein MD1Lixin Qu MS2Natalie J. Hannah MA3 University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC, USA University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USAStudies have long shown that some patients receive less than optimal care for depression in primary care settings. However, few studies have uncovered factors that predict and explain this deficiency. The authors administered a survey to 408 primary care physicians. They examined how physicians’ attitudes (eg, feeling positively or negatively about treating depression in their patients), physicians’ beliefs (eg, beliefs about what their patients think and prefer in terms of depression care), and demographic characteristics (independent variables) predicted optimal depression care (dependent variable). Using logistical regression analyses, they identified differences in treatment decisions between family and internal medicine physicians. Physicians’ specialty and race (family physicians and white physicians were more likely to prescribe a medication) were unique determinants of whether the physician treated depression by prescribing medication; physicians’ specialty and race (family physicians and nonwhite physicians were more likely to provide office-based counseling) were unique determinants of whether the physician treated depression by providing office-based counseling; physicians’ beliefs about depression care and physician age were unique statistically significant determinants of whether the physician treated depression by providing a referral to a mental health specialist. These findings help clarify how physicians’ specialty and beliefs about depression care influence treatment. In addition, the results in this study suggest that there are differences between family and internal medicine physicians in terms of their practice patterns and beliefs in types of treatment that patients would be willing to receive. Implications for future research on primary care depression treatment are discussed.https://doi.org/10.1177/2150131910387647
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lisa M. Hooper PhD
Steven A. Epstein MD
Lixin Qu MS
Natalie J. Hannah MA
spellingShingle Lisa M. Hooper PhD
Steven A. Epstein MD
Lixin Qu MS
Natalie J. Hannah MA
Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Physicians’ Attitudes and Beliefs About Depression
Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
author_facet Lisa M. Hooper PhD
Steven A. Epstein MD
Lixin Qu MS
Natalie J. Hannah MA
author_sort Lisa M. Hooper PhD
title Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Physicians’ Attitudes and Beliefs About Depression
title_short Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Physicians’ Attitudes and Beliefs About Depression
title_full Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Physicians’ Attitudes and Beliefs About Depression
title_fullStr Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Physicians’ Attitudes and Beliefs About Depression
title_full_unstemmed Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Physicians’ Attitudes and Beliefs About Depression
title_sort family medicine and internal medicine physicians’ attitudes and beliefs about depression
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
issn 2150-1319
2150-1327
publishDate 2011-04-01
description Studies have long shown that some patients receive less than optimal care for depression in primary care settings. However, few studies have uncovered factors that predict and explain this deficiency. The authors administered a survey to 408 primary care physicians. They examined how physicians’ attitudes (eg, feeling positively or negatively about treating depression in their patients), physicians’ beliefs (eg, beliefs about what their patients think and prefer in terms of depression care), and demographic characteristics (independent variables) predicted optimal depression care (dependent variable). Using logistical regression analyses, they identified differences in treatment decisions between family and internal medicine physicians. Physicians’ specialty and race (family physicians and white physicians were more likely to prescribe a medication) were unique determinants of whether the physician treated depression by prescribing medication; physicians’ specialty and race (family physicians and nonwhite physicians were more likely to provide office-based counseling) were unique determinants of whether the physician treated depression by providing office-based counseling; physicians’ beliefs about depression care and physician age were unique statistically significant determinants of whether the physician treated depression by providing a referral to a mental health specialist. These findings help clarify how physicians’ specialty and beliefs about depression care influence treatment. In addition, the results in this study suggest that there are differences between family and internal medicine physicians in terms of their practice patterns and beliefs in types of treatment that patients would be willing to receive. Implications for future research on primary care depression treatment are discussed.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2150131910387647
work_keys_str_mv AT lisamhooperphd familymedicineandinternalmedicinephysiciansattitudesandbeliefsaboutdepression
AT stevenaepsteinmd familymedicineandinternalmedicinephysiciansattitudesandbeliefsaboutdepression
AT lixinqums familymedicineandinternalmedicinephysiciansattitudesandbeliefsaboutdepression
AT nataliejhannahma familymedicineandinternalmedicinephysiciansattitudesandbeliefsaboutdepression
_version_ 1724640791197908992