-
Multicenter Study
'A coal face option': GPs' perspectives on the rise in antidepressant prescribing.
- Sara Macdonald, Jill Morrison, Margaret Maxwell, Rosalia Munoz-Arroyo, Andrew Power, Michael Smith, Matt Sutton, and Philip Wilson.
- Section of General Practice and Primary Care, Division of Community Based Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G129LX, UK. s.macdonald@clinmed.gla.ac.uk
- Br J Gen Pract. 2009 Sep 1; 59 (566): e299e307e299-307.
BackgroundLevels of antidepressant prescribing have dramatically increased in Western countries in the last two decades.AimTo explore GPs' views about, and explanations for, the increase in antidepressant prescribing in Scotland between 1995 and 2004.DesignQualitative, interview study.SettingGeneral practices, Scotland.ParticipantsGPs in 30 practices (n = 63) purposively selected to reflect a range of practice characteristics and levels of antidepressant prescribing.MethodInterviews with GPs were taped and transcribed. Analysis followed a Framework Approach.ResultsGPs offered a range of explanations for the rise in antidepressant prescribing in Scotland. Few doctors thought that the incidence of depression had increased, and many questioned the appropriateness of current levels of prescribing. A number of related factors were considered to have contributed to the increase. These included: the success of campaigns to raise awareness of depression; a willingness among patients to seek help; and the perceived safety of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, making it easier for GPs to manage depression in primary care. Many GPs believed that unhappiness, exacerbated by social deprivation and the breakdown of traditional social structures, was being 'medicalised' inappropriately.ConclusionMost antidepressant prescriptions in Scotland are issued by GPs, and current policy aims to reduce levels of prescribing. To meet this aim, GPs' prescribing behaviour needs to change. The findings suggest that GPs see themselves as responders to, rather than facilitators of, change and this has obvious implications for initiatives to reduce prescribing.
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