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Australian Journal of Primary Health Australian Journal of Primary Health Society
The issues influencing community health services and primary health care
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The Impact of a Clinical Audit on GP Detection of Depression

Patrick G. Bolton, Sharon M. Parker, Kylie J. Fergusson and Jannifer D. Orman

Australian Journal of Primary Health 9(1) 88 - 93
Published: 2003

Abstract

Objective: To determine if a clinical audit and linked educational workshop would improve the ability of general practitioners to accurately detect depression. Design: Pre- and post-data collection over a six-month period (two eight-week collection periods), associated educational workshop, and comprehensive treatment guidelines. Setting: General Practice in the Central Sydney Area. Study participants: A total of 1106 patients (592 pre-, 514 post-collection) from six general practices. Patients were required to be 18-65yrs and willing and able to complete a self-administered depression rating scale. Main Outcome Measures: General practitioner rating of consecutive patients using a tick box scale matched to patients' self-report on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Comparison of patients' scores on the two sub-scales of the Scale (depression and anxiety) and the reason for presentation rated by the general practitioner. Results: The mean age of participants was 35 years for audit one and 33 years for audit two with substantially more females participating (73.6% and 68.1%) as opposed to males (26.4% and 31.9%). The presence of psychological problems as identified by the HADS was higher than that reported in the literature and actually decreased from 65.9% in audit one to 59.7% in audit two. There were non-significant increases in the rate at which participating general practitioners detected depression with the proportion of "true negatives" increasing between the audits and the proportion of "false negatives" decreasing. No change occurred in either the true or false positive rates. Conclusions: Within this study, the audit, feedback and educational workshop in combination achieved poor results. This, and the prevalence of depression in the population, suggests further research is warranted to determine an effective method of educating general practitioners to detect depression.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PY03011

© La Trobe University 2003

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