Mood disorders in General Practice - as simple as DSM, SSRI & CBT?

Monday, 30 March, 2009 • Announcements, Critical Information, Mental Health

Mood disorders in General Practice - as simple as DSM, SSRI & CBT?


The webcast
In the past decade mental health, and depression in particular, has received a great deal of attention both in the general and medical media. Awareness of depression has markedly increased, attempts have been made to reduce its stigma, and a lot of effort has gone into educating GPs.

No-one would argue that this has not been a positive development. However it has lead on occasions to an oversimplification, where all bad moods are depression, and depression always responds to evidence based treatment with CBT & an SSRI.

Clinical reality in general practice is rather different. We see a wide range of low moods, only some of which are unipolar depression. Many belong to other diagnoses, and many, despite being very significant, struggle to fit neatly any single DSM category. General practice is messy and our patients rarely conform to the neat case studies of typical education modules. And treatments may be evidence based, but the patients to whom we offer them are rarely the same as those carefully selected folk from whom the evidence was gathered.

This talk tries to step back a little and look first at normal mood and its adaptive function, and then go on to take an honest look at the diverse range of mood presentations in GP. In no sense didactic, it is one particular GP’s reflections on how he approaches the manifold uncertainties around treating mood dysfunction. It touches on the difference between the cross sectional, phenomenologically driven approach of some specialist practitioners and the more longitudinal, formulation based approach often found in general practice. It touches on lifestyle, ‘second line’ pharmacological treatments and when to move beyond CBT & explore the meaning of depressive symptoms.

The presenter
Dr Simon Cowap MBBS (Hons) FRACGP is a GP with a long interest in mental health. He is currently practicing at the Brain & Mind Research Institute (BMRI), Camperdown, headspace (youth mental health initiative) in Campbelltown, and in private mental health focused practice in Glebe. He is a level II mental health accredited practitioner, and has both attended and helped design and deliver a number of mental health education initiatives for general practitioners. He has written on general and mental health issues for publications including the Australian Family Physician, Medical Observer, the Australian newspaper and a variety of internet sites. He is currently assisting in the development of the BMRI’s post graduate education programme for GPs intended to commence in 2010. He is interested in the collaborative care of mental health patients and the unique perspective GPs bring to the mental health team.

Accessing and participating in the broadcast
The live broadcast will be a presentation to a small studio audience. The talk will last approximately 30 to 40 mins with 20 minutes for questions. You will be able to watch the live webcast at home on your computer, and the program will allow you to type in questions which the speaker can address during the question time. Access is free to ACPM members and members of the Central Sydney GP Network - co-sponsors of this webcast.

Instructions for viewing
This event is free to financial members of CSGPN, details can be viewed by logging in to the Members section of this website or contact us for further details.

If you are not able to view the live webcast you will be able to access it a few weeks later on the web site by going through the above steps.

For further information please contact
Dr Howard Gwynne
email: howard@aya.yale.edu
ph: 0402 827 156

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