Author/Authors :
John Joska، نويسنده , , Alan J. Flisher، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background The field of psychiatric epidemiology
has yielded several large and important studies
of the prevalence of psychiatric disorders. These
surveys have been enhanced by the inclusion of methodologies
that reflect the needs for care of the population in
question. Clinical studies of psychiatric disorders and
unmet needs have focussed on identifying needs and correlating
them with service evaluation and satisfaction
measures. The association between prevalence, service
use and unmet need requires review in order to establish
whether there are trends and consistent findings.Method
Peer-reviewed studies involving the assessment of need
up to the present were included.These were of two broad
groups: population-based studies and clinical studies.
Studies based on outcome measures, review articles,and
child psychiatry, old age, and intellectual disability samples
were excluded.We conducted a search of MEDLINE
and PSYCHINFO using the key words, “mental health
addition,we hand-searched key journals and sought personal
communication with researchers in the field. Results
A total of 14 population studies and 19 clinical studies
were retrieved. The percentage of the general
population who reported at least one need for care
ranged from 9.5% to 13.8%. The numbers of needs in
psychiatric patients ranged from 3.3 to 8.6.Correlates of
unmet need include: unemployment, single status, low
quality of life and high disability scores,and the presence
of certain psychiatric diagnoses, such as affective psychosis
and personality disorders. Higher rates of met
need and service satisfaction are correlated with a longer
duration of service contact. Conclusion The assessment
of need to date has been established either by service use
data to make inferences about unmet need,by asking limited
guided questions about needs, or by using established
needs assessment instruments. The high prevalence
of psychiatric disorders and the weak correlation
between disorder and unmet need require a combined
approach towards service development.