Novel primary care treatment package for patients with medically unexplained symptoms, 2017, Röhricht et al

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Apologies if this MUS PowerPoint presentation has already been posted in another thread:

https://static1.squarespace.com/sta...1840777398/MUS+training+for+GPs+TH+030817.pdf

( Copy archived here: https://dxrevisionwatch.files.wordpress.com/2020/02/mustrainingforgpsth030817.pdf )


East London NHS Foundation Trust


Managing ‘MUS’ / BDS in primary care

Frank Röhricht MD, FRCPsych Associate Medical Director Honorary Professor of Psychiatry &

Nina Papadopoulos Senior Dance Movement Psychotherapist MUS Project Manager and Clinical Supervisor

Extracts from slides (there are 101 slides in this presentation):


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The paper mentioned in the last slide, in post above:

https://www.researchgate.net/public...xplained_symptoms_a_cohort_intervention_study

PDF: https://www.researchgate.net/profil...ined-symptoms-a-cohort-intervention-study.pdf

Novel primary care treatment package for patients with medically unexplained symptoms: a cohort intervention study

Article (PDF Available) · October 2017
DOI: 10.3399/bjgpopen17X101121

Frank Roehricht, East London NHS Foundation Trust; Ivan Zammit; Nina Papadopoulos

Abstract

Background Existing care models for patients with persistent medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) do not adequately address the needs of these patients. New and innovative intervention strategies are necessary to achieve better health and corresponding economic outcomes.

Aim To explore the feasibility of implementing a pragmatic care package that provides primary care treatment for patients with persistent MUS and to evaluate recruitment, retention, and acceptability as well as the potential impact on clinical outcomes and service utilisation.

Design & setting Prospective cohort intervention study involving a cluster of seven GP surgeries in Newham, East London, providing a 'One-Stop-Shop' primary care treatment service.

Method The care package included: identification, assessment, engagement, psychoeducation, and a choice of group interventions (mindfulness-based stress reduction [MBSR] and body-oriented psychological therapy [BOPT]). Baseline and follow-up data on somatic symptom levels (PHQ-15), health-related quality of life (SF-36, EQ-5D) and service utilisation was analysed.

Results In total, 145 patients were referred and assessed for eligibility, and 93 were included in the study. Participants engaged well with different components of the care package and gained significant improvements in somatic symptom levels with corresponding increases of quality-of-life ratings and a reduction in healthcare utilisation (GP contacts and referrals to specialist services) as well as associated healthcare costs.

Conclusion The primary care treatment package can be successfully implemented in primary care at a relatively low cost and easily adopted into routine care. The body-oriented approach is well accepted by clinicians and patients. Controlled trials should be conducted to test the efficacy of the treatment package
 
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