A record-linkage study of post-stroke primary care psychological therapy effectiveness in England

IF 8.7
Jae Won Suh, Vaughan Bell, Joshua E. J. Buckman, Céline El Baou, Roopal Desai, Caroline Fearn, Natalie L. Marchant, Marcus Richards, Claudia Cooper, Stephen Pilling, Amber John, Joshua Stott, Rob Saunders
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Abstract

At least one-third of stroke survivors are affected by depression or anxiety, but no large-scale studies of real-world clinical practice have assessed whether psychological therapies are beneficial for these patients. Here we show that psychological treatment is effective for stroke survivors on average, using national healthcare records from National Health Service Talking Therapies services in England, including 7,597 patients with a hospital diagnosis of stroke before attendance. Following psychological treatment, stroke survivors experienced moderate reductions in depression and large reductions in anxiety symptoms. Patients who started attending the services a year or more after a stroke were less likely to reliably recover from symptoms of depression or anxiety than those seen within six months of a stroke, irrespective of differences in baseline characteristics including age, gender, local area deprivation and symptom severity. Compared with a matched sample of patients without a stroke, stroke survivors were less likely to reliably recover and more likely to reliably deteriorate after psychological treatment, although adjusting for level of physical comorbidity attenuated these relationships. It is crucial that clinicians working with stroke survivors screen for symptoms of depression and anxiety and consider referring patients to primary care psychological therapies as early as possible. This study investigates the effectiveness of psychological therapies for depression and anxiety symptoms in 7,597 stroke survivors within England’s primary care system. Results show that 71.3% of stroke survivors experienced reliable improvement and significant reductions in symptom scores, underscoring the importance of intervention for improving recovery.
英国卒中后初级保健心理治疗效果的记录联系研究。
至少有三分之一的中风幸存者受到抑郁或焦虑的影响,但没有大规模的现实临床实践研究评估心理治疗是否对这些患者有益。在这里,我们表明心理治疗对中风幸存者平均有效,使用英国国民健康服务谈话治疗服务的国家医疗记录,包括7,597名住院前被诊断为中风的患者。经过心理治疗后,中风幸存者的抑郁程度有所减轻,焦虑症状也大大减轻。与中风后六个月内就诊的患者相比,中风后一年或更长时间开始就诊的患者从抑郁或焦虑症状中恢复的可能性更小,无论基线特征(包括年龄、性别、局部区域剥夺和症状严重程度)的差异如何。与没有中风的匹配样本患者相比,中风幸存者在心理治疗后更不可能可靠地恢复,更可能可靠地恶化,尽管调整身体合并症的水平减弱了这些关系。与中风幸存者一起工作的临床医生筛查抑郁和焦虑症状,并考虑尽早将患者转介到初级保健心理治疗,这一点至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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