Improving Mental Health Outcomes in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder in the Gulf States: A Review of the Role of Electronic Enablers in Monitoring Residual Symptoms.
Nahida Nayaz AhmedShuja ReaguSamia AlkhooriAmina CherchaliPradeep PurushottamahantiUrooj SiddiquiPublished in: Journal of multidisciplinary healthcare (2024)
Up to 75% of individuals with major depressive disorder (MDD) may have residual symptoms such as amotivation or anhedonia, which prevent full functional recovery and are associated with relapse. Globally and in the Gulf region, primary care physicians (PCPs) have an important role in alleviating stigma and in identifying and monitoring the residual symptoms of depression, as PCPs are the preliminary interface between patients and specialists in the collaborative care model. Therefore, mental healthcare upskilling programmes for PCPs are needed, as are basic instruments to evaluate residual symptoms swiftly and accurately in primary care. Currently, few if any electronic enablers have been designed to specifically monitor residual symptoms in patients with MDD. The objectives of this review are to highlight how accurate evaluation of residual symptoms with an easy-to-use electronic enabler in primary care may improve functional recovery and overall mental health outcomes, and how such an enabler may guide pharmacotherapy selection and positively impact the patient journey. Here, we show the potential advantages of electronic enablers in primary care, which include the possibility for a deeper "dive" into the patient journey and facilitation of treatment optimisation. At the policy and practice levels, electronic enablers endorsed by government agencies and local psychiatric associations may receive greater PCP attention and backing, improve patient involvement in shared clinical decision-making, and help to reduce the general stigma around mental health disorders. In the Gulf region, an easy-to-use electronic enabler in primary care, incorporating aspects of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale to monitor amotivation, and aspects of the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale to monitor anhedonia, could markedly improve the patient journey from residual symptoms through to full functional recovery in individuals with MDD.
Keyphrases
- primary care
- major depressive disorder
- mental health
- healthcare
- sleep quality
- bipolar disorder
- mental illness
- depressive symptoms
- case report
- decision making
- general practice
- end stage renal disease
- public health
- high resolution
- quality improvement
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- social support
- working memory
- pain management
- insulin resistance
- skeletal muscle
- health information