Somatization and health anxiety as predictors of health care use
Somatization and health anxiety as predictors of health care use
Objective: to assess whether the number of somatic symptoms and health anxiety are independent predictors of future health care use after adjusting for confounders.
Methods: in a random sample of the adult UK population, questionnaires assessed the number of somatic symptoms (Somatic Symptom Inventory), health anxiety (Whiteley Index), anxiety/depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), the number of physical illnesses and demographic variables. The number of consultations in primary care was obtained from medical records for 1 year before and after questionnaire assessment, and negative binomial regression analyses identified predictors of consultation rate.
Results: the sample included 961 participants (58.0% response) with complete medical record data for 609 participants. After adjustment for consultation rate in the prior year, the predictors of subsequent consultation rate in primary care were the number of physical illnesses, off work through illness, Whiteley Index (incidence rate ratio [IRR] = 1.22, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.09-1.35), and the Whiteley Index-by-Somatic Symptom Inventory interaction term. Reported physical abuse predicted an increased consultation rate in women (IRR = 2.30, 95% CI = 1.08-4.90) but a reduced rate in men (IRR = 0.43, 95% CI = 0.22-0.84), interaction p = 0.003.
Conclusions: these data raise the possibility that both increased health anxiety and number of bothersome somatic symptoms predict frequent medical consultations. A more complex model of predicting future health care use is needed than has been studied previously, which is potentially relevant to the current discussions of the proposed DSM-V and International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision, diagnostic guidelines regarding complex somatic symptom disorders.
consultation liaison psychiatry, health anxiety, health care use, somatic symptoms, somatoform disorder
656-664
Tomenson, Barbara
6304e030-da3c-4d46-a93a-eec5448f1609
McBeth, John
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
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MacFarlane, Gary
e17bbdb7-9d82-42ac-8a0a-09bf10885e3c
Davies, Ian
fa56a127-4521-400c-a970-ca89b01c244d
Jackson, Judy
e8be4ed8-5e42-4418-bff5-3dcc38959745
Littlewood, Alison
3742b2be-5f6b-460c-8e55-546d0b0faffb
Creed, Francis H.
5b34349d-b1e1-4fe4-8393-974101a9808e
July 2012
Tomenson, Barbara
6304e030-da3c-4d46-a93a-eec5448f1609
McBeth, John
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
6ace62ab-b693-45b1-86ad-42b7cc0fd3f1
MacFarlane, Gary
e17bbdb7-9d82-42ac-8a0a-09bf10885e3c
Davies, Ian
fa56a127-4521-400c-a970-ca89b01c244d
Jackson, Judy
e8be4ed8-5e42-4418-bff5-3dcc38959745
Littlewood, Alison
3742b2be-5f6b-460c-8e55-546d0b0faffb
Creed, Francis H.
5b34349d-b1e1-4fe4-8393-974101a9808e
Tomenson, Barbara, McBeth, John, Chew-Graham, Carolyn A., MacFarlane, Gary, Davies, Ian, Jackson, Judy, Littlewood, Alison and Creed, Francis H.
(2012)
Somatization and health anxiety as predictors of health care use.
Psychosomatic Medicine, 74 (6), .
(doi:10.1097/PSY.0b013e31825cb140).
Abstract
Objective: to assess whether the number of somatic symptoms and health anxiety are independent predictors of future health care use after adjusting for confounders.
Methods: in a random sample of the adult UK population, questionnaires assessed the number of somatic symptoms (Somatic Symptom Inventory), health anxiety (Whiteley Index), anxiety/depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), the number of physical illnesses and demographic variables. The number of consultations in primary care was obtained from medical records for 1 year before and after questionnaire assessment, and negative binomial regression analyses identified predictors of consultation rate.
Results: the sample included 961 participants (58.0% response) with complete medical record data for 609 participants. After adjustment for consultation rate in the prior year, the predictors of subsequent consultation rate in primary care were the number of physical illnesses, off work through illness, Whiteley Index (incidence rate ratio [IRR] = 1.22, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.09-1.35), and the Whiteley Index-by-Somatic Symptom Inventory interaction term. Reported physical abuse predicted an increased consultation rate in women (IRR = 2.30, 95% CI = 1.08-4.90) but a reduced rate in men (IRR = 0.43, 95% CI = 0.22-0.84), interaction p = 0.003.
Conclusions: these data raise the possibility that both increased health anxiety and number of bothersome somatic symptoms predict frequent medical consultations. A more complex model of predicting future health care use is needed than has been studied previously, which is potentially relevant to the current discussions of the proposed DSM-V and International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision, diagnostic guidelines regarding complex somatic symptom disorders.
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More information
Published date: July 2012
Keywords:
consultation liaison psychiatry, health anxiety, health care use, somatic symptoms, somatoform disorder
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Local EPrints ID: 492925
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492925
ISSN: 0033-3174
PURE UUID: 9aae2dc8-6fea-44a4-9bc8-dd1d00f5caa1
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Date deposited: 20 Aug 2024 16:49
Last modified: 22 Aug 2024 02:11
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Author:
Barbara Tomenson
Author:
John McBeth
Author:
Carolyn A. Chew-Graham
Author:
Gary MacFarlane
Author:
Ian Davies
Author:
Judy Jackson
Author:
Alison Littlewood
Author:
Francis H. Creed
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