[Outcome of simultaneous psychosomatic/internal-medicine inpatient care--a naturalistic follow-up study]

  • Arne Zastrow
  • Faude Verena
  • Franziska Seyboth
  • Dorothea Niehoff
  • Wolfgang Herzog
  • Bernd Löwe

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The effectiveness of simultaneous psychosomatic and internal-medicine inpatient care has not yet been satisfyingly investigated. What outcome is found in patients treated in a psychosomatic/internal medicine setting? Can we predict a reduction in depression and symptom severity? METHODS: The study design is prospective and naturalistic. Patients from a psychosomatic/internal-medicine setting and a solely internal-medicine ward filled in self-report questionnaires on the day of admission, five days thereafter, and three months after discharge. RESULTS: A total of 221 patients from a psychosomatic/internal-medicine setting and 418 patients from a solely internal-medicine ward were included. Patient characteristics differed significantly between the two wards. Treatment was associated with a reduction of depression and somatic symptom severity over time. Depression severity improved more in the psychosomatic/internal-medicine setting than in the internal-medicine ward (ES = 0.37 vs. ES = 0.65). The strongest predictor of improvement of depression and somatic symptom severity was the patients' belief that their physical well-being was influenced by psychological factors (B = 1.44 and 1 = 0.65). CONCLUSIONS: The results document a differential approach to admission in an integrated psychosomatic/internal medicine setting and underline the favourable course for psychological and somatic symptoms.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer3
ISSN1438-3608
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2009
pubmed 19886592