
Psychiatric News May 20, 2005
Volume 40 Number 10
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
p. 36
M.D.s Urged to Pay More Heed To Mental, Physical Comorbidities
Joan Arehart-Treichel
A surprising variety of nonpsychiatric illnesses co-occur in youngsters
with psychiatric ones. Whether the comorbid illnesses share common origins,
however, remains to be determined.
Psychiatric ill health often goes hand in hand with nonpsychiatric
disorders in adults, studies have suggested. The same overlap appears to occur
among youth as well, a large Canadian study has found.
The study was headed by Donald Spady, M.D., an associate professor of
pediatrics at the University of Alberta, and results were published in the
March Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.
According to the Government of Alberta, some 400,000 children aged 6 to 17
visited a family physician, pediatrician, or psychiatrist in Alberta during
the province's 1995-96 fiscal year. The physicians used the International
Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification
(ICD-9-CM) to diagnose the children for psychiatric disorders and
nonpsychiatric medical illnesses. Using the diagnostic results for these
youngsters, Spady and his coworkers determined how many youngsters had a
psychiatric disorder, and how many of those children also had a nonpsychiatric
illness. Eight percent of the youth had at least one psychiatric disorder, the
researchers found, and of these, 92 percent also had at least one
nonpsychiatric illness.
Co-Occurrence Varied
Moreover, the investigators discovered, the co-occurrence of psychiatric
illnesses with nonpsychiatric ones varied widely depending on the type of the
latter, from as little as 7 percent to as much as 42 percent. Specifically,
only 7 percent of the children with skin disorders had a psychiatric disorder,
whereas 42 percent of the children with developmental delay did. The
percentages of psychiatric illness for children with other kinds of medical
illnesses fell between these extremes (see chart).
Because developmental delay is more associated with medical origins and
services than psychological, the authors treated it as an independent analysis
though it properly falls into the domain of psychiatric disorder.
Finally, Spady and his coworkers grouped the psychiatric disorders in their
subjects into three categoriesemotional disorders (for example,
depression, or an acute stress reaction), behavioral disorders (for example,
hyperactivity, drug abuse), and psychosis. They then attempted to see what the
odds were of having a specific nonpsychiatric condition in conjunction with
one of the three categories of psychiatric disorders. They found that the odds
ratios varied quite a bitfrom, for example, 1:1 for sinusitis
associated with emotional disorders in girls, to 2:1 for a heart-conduction
disorder associated with behavioral disorders in boys, to 5:1 for
iron-deficiency anemia linked with psychosis in boys.
"It is surprising that such a wide variety of [nonpsychiatric]
disorders was associated with psychiatric disorders," Spady and his team
said in their report, "and although the odds ratios are generally
small.. .it appears that a wide variety of medical illnesses may have
psychiatric overtones."
Be Aware of Comorbidity
The take-home message, Spady told Psychiatric News, is that
"a significant proportion of children with psychiatric disorders often
have underlying or associated [nonpsychiatric] disorders, and psychiatrists
should be aware of this. In like manner, general physicians should be aware
that children can also have psychiatric
disorders."
One of the strengths of this study, Spady said, is that it was conducted
not just on children with psychiatric or nonpsychiatric disorders, but on a
large population of children. Thus, the links they found between psychiatric
and other illnesses "may be less biased than those seen in populations
selected for specific mental or physical problems."
One of the weaknesses of the study, Spady added, is that the data are
cross-sectional. Thus, one cannot determine from them whether co-occurring
psychiatric disorders and nonpsychiatric disorders have a cause-and-effect
relationship or whether they share pathophysiological origins.
The investigators provided the funding for the study.
An abstract of the report, "Medical and Psychiatric
Comorbidity and Health Care Use Among Children 6 to 17 Years Old," is
posted online at
<http://archpedi.amaassn.org/cgi/content/short/159/3/231>.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2005 159 231[Abstract/Free Full Text]
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