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South Med J. 1986 Oct;79(10):1273-9. doi: 10.1097/00007611-198610000-00019.

Diagnosing depression in primary care: a practical, interdisciplinary review and a call for change.

Southern medical journal

T C Davis, R G Nathan, M N Cash

PMID: 3764526 DOI: 10.1097/00007611-198610000-00019

Abstract

Because recognizing depression is of critical importance, we have organized a comprehensive review of current literature on medical, psychiatric, and behavioral science to give primary care physicians a brief, practical, and multidisciplinary survey of diagnostic approaches to depression. The review is also designed to help clarify the disparate approaches, definitions, theories, and classifications of depression found in the literature. We emphasize two emerging perspectives important to primary care physicians in their understanding and treatment of depression. The first is a wider view of masked depression, and the second is depressive behavior related to family and cultural systems. Traditional classifications may have limited applicability to the patient families most often seen in primary care. We hope that the paper will serve as a challenge to physicians to combine open and creative observation with inductive reasoning in the creation of a more useful system for classifying depression in primary care.

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