Psychiatric disorders in patients attending a dermatology outpatient clinic
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Date
1998
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Abstract
Background: Psychiatric comorbidity in patients with skin disorders has been reported. Objective: To find out the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in dermatology outpatients and to investigate the factors that affect the psychiatric symptoms. Methods: 256 patients attending our dermatology outpatient clinic completed a 12-item General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) following their dermatologic examination. A standardized personal interview was performed to establish a psychiatric diagnosis in patients sampled by using a stratified random sampling method. Results: The prevalence of psychiatric disorders was found to be 33.4% in the study group. The mean of the total GHQ scores of the sample group (n = 256 patients) was 3.656. The duration of the dermatologic complaints, sex of the subjects, localization of the lesions, and dermatologic diagnosis did not affect the total GHQ scores of the patients. Conclusion: Psychiatric comorbidity in 33.4% of the dermatology outpatients indicates the need for considering emotional factors for an effective management of the cutaneous disorders.
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Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Ambulatory Care Facilities , Analysis of Variance , Comorbidity , Dermatology , Educational Status , Female , Health Surveys , Humans , Interviews , Male , Mental Disorders , Mental Health Services , Middle Aged , Questionnaires , Self-Examination , Skin Diseases , Social Class , Turkey , adult , article , comorbidity , dermatology , disease duration , emotion , female , health status , human , interview , major clinical study , male , mental disease , outpatient , priority journal , psychiatric diagnosis , questionnaire , sex difference , skin defect