Psychotropic Drug Use in São Paulo, Brazil--An Epidemiological Survey.

To estimate the prevalence of one month psychotropic drug use in São Paulo, Brazil, and to assess the gap treatment between the presence of mental disorders and psychotropic drug users.A probabilistic sample of non-institutionalized individuals from the general population of São Paulo (n = 2336; tur...

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Main Authors: Maria Ines Quintana, Sergio Baxter Andreoli, Marcela Poctich Peluffo, Wagner Silva Ribeiro, Marcelo M Feijo, Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan, Evandro S F Coutinho, Jair de Jesus Mari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4529275?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-77dc54e8bc0b47218976ad4bf8cc800a2020-11-25T00:25:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01108e013505910.1371/journal.pone.0135059Psychotropic Drug Use in São Paulo, Brazil--An Epidemiological Survey.Maria Ines QuintanaSergio Baxter AndreoliMarcela Poctich PeluffoWagner Silva RibeiroMarcelo M FeijoRodrigo Affonseca BressanEvandro S F CoutinhoJair de Jesus MariTo estimate the prevalence of one month psychotropic drug use in São Paulo, Brazil, and to assess the gap treatment between the presence of mental disorders and psychotropic drug users.A probabilistic sample of non-institutionalized individuals from the general population of São Paulo (n = 2336; turnout: 84.5%) who were 15 years or older were interviewed by a trained research staff, applying the Composite International Diagnostic Interview 2.1 (CIDI WHO) (depression, anxiety-phobia, OCD\PTSD, alcoholism sections), and an inventory investigating psychotropic drug use during the 12-month and one-month periods immediately preceding the interview. Logistic models were fitted to investigate associations between psychotropic drug use as well as socio-demographic and clinical variables.The one month prevalence of psychotropic drug use in São Paulo was 5.89%, the most commonly used drugs were antidepressants (3.15%) and tranquilizers (2.67%). A higher consumption of psychotropic drugs (overall, antidepressants and tranquilizers) was observed among women (OR:2.42), older individuals (OR:1.04), individuals with higher levels of formal education (1.06), and individuals with a family (OR:2.29) or personal history of mental illness (OR:3.27). The main psychotropic drug prescribers were psychiatrists (41%), followed by general practitioners (30%); 60% of psychotropic drugs were obtained through a government-run dispensing program. Most individuals who obtained a positive diagnosis on the CIDI 2.1 during the previous month were not using psychotropic medication (85%). Among individuals with a diagnosis of moderate to severe depression, 67.5% were not on any pharmacological treatment.There is a change in the type of psychotropic more often used in São Paulo, from benzodiazepines to antidepressants, this event is observed in different cultures. The prevalence of use is similar to other developing countries. Most of the patients presenting a psychiatric illness in the month prior to testing were not receiving any sort of psychiatric medication. This may be explained by a failure to identify cases in primary care, which could be improved (and access to treatment could be facilitated) if professionals received more specialized training in managing cases with mental health problems.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4529275?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Ines Quintana
Sergio Baxter Andreoli
Marcela Poctich Peluffo
Wagner Silva Ribeiro
Marcelo M Feijo
Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan
Evandro S F Coutinho
Jair de Jesus Mari
spellingShingle Maria Ines Quintana
Sergio Baxter Andreoli
Marcela Poctich Peluffo
Wagner Silva Ribeiro
Marcelo M Feijo
Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan
Evandro S F Coutinho
Jair de Jesus Mari
Psychotropic Drug Use in São Paulo, Brazil--An Epidemiological Survey.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Maria Ines Quintana
Sergio Baxter Andreoli
Marcela Poctich Peluffo
Wagner Silva Ribeiro
Marcelo M Feijo
Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan
Evandro S F Coutinho
Jair de Jesus Mari
author_sort Maria Ines Quintana
title Psychotropic Drug Use in São Paulo, Brazil--An Epidemiological Survey.
title_short Psychotropic Drug Use in São Paulo, Brazil--An Epidemiological Survey.
title_full Psychotropic Drug Use in São Paulo, Brazil--An Epidemiological Survey.
title_fullStr Psychotropic Drug Use in São Paulo, Brazil--An Epidemiological Survey.
title_full_unstemmed Psychotropic Drug Use in São Paulo, Brazil--An Epidemiological Survey.
title_sort psychotropic drug use in são paulo, brazil--an epidemiological survey.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description To estimate the prevalence of one month psychotropic drug use in São Paulo, Brazil, and to assess the gap treatment between the presence of mental disorders and psychotropic drug users.A probabilistic sample of non-institutionalized individuals from the general population of São Paulo (n = 2336; turnout: 84.5%) who were 15 years or older were interviewed by a trained research staff, applying the Composite International Diagnostic Interview 2.1 (CIDI WHO) (depression, anxiety-phobia, OCD\PTSD, alcoholism sections), and an inventory investigating psychotropic drug use during the 12-month and one-month periods immediately preceding the interview. Logistic models were fitted to investigate associations between psychotropic drug use as well as socio-demographic and clinical variables.The one month prevalence of psychotropic drug use in São Paulo was 5.89%, the most commonly used drugs were antidepressants (3.15%) and tranquilizers (2.67%). A higher consumption of psychotropic drugs (overall, antidepressants and tranquilizers) was observed among women (OR:2.42), older individuals (OR:1.04), individuals with higher levels of formal education (1.06), and individuals with a family (OR:2.29) or personal history of mental illness (OR:3.27). The main psychotropic drug prescribers were psychiatrists (41%), followed by general practitioners (30%); 60% of psychotropic drugs were obtained through a government-run dispensing program. Most individuals who obtained a positive diagnosis on the CIDI 2.1 during the previous month were not using psychotropic medication (85%). Among individuals with a diagnosis of moderate to severe depression, 67.5% were not on any pharmacological treatment.There is a change in the type of psychotropic more often used in São Paulo, from benzodiazepines to antidepressants, this event is observed in different cultures. The prevalence of use is similar to other developing countries. Most of the patients presenting a psychiatric illness in the month prior to testing were not receiving any sort of psychiatric medication. This may be explained by a failure to identify cases in primary care, which could be improved (and access to treatment could be facilitated) if professionals received more specialized training in managing cases with mental health problems.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4529275?pdf=render
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