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MARY ELLEN SCHNEIDER
New recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force endorse the
need for routine sreening of adolescents for clinical depression.
The task force recommended that physicians screen adolescent patients aged
12-18 years for major depressive disorder provided that systems are in place
to ensure further evaluation, psychotherapy, and follow-up. But the task
force concluded that there was insufficient evidence to make a
recommendation about screening younger children aged 7-11 years (Pediatrics
2009;123:1223-8).
In 2002, the task force examined depression screening in adolescents and
found there was not enough evidence at that time to recommend for or against
routine screening. However, new evidence on the effectiveness of medications
and psychotherapy to treat depressed adolescents and the reliability of
screening instruments to detect depression in this group prompted the task
force members to recommend screening.
In its recommendation, the task force concluded that adolescents aged 12-18
years could be effectively treated for major depressive disorder with
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors or with a combination of SSRIs and
either cognitive-behavioral therapy or interpersonal psychotherapy. But
because of the suicide risks associated with the use of SSRIs, the task
force recommended that they be prescribed only when the patient can be
closely monitored.
The best approach is likely to be a combination of careful medication
management and a referral for psychotherapy, Dr. Tom DeWitt, a member of the
task force and director of general and community pediatrics at Cincinnati
Children's Hospital Medical Center, said in an interview.
Widespread screening is critical because of the high prevalence of
depression among adolescents and the serious consequences of leaving the
condition untreated, he said.
It is estimated that about 6% of adolescents have major depressive disorder,
with the lifetime prevalence among adolescents possibly as high as 20%,
according to the report.
Although the recommendation is meant to apply to all teens, physicians
should pay special attention to adolescents who have a parental history of
depression, have comorbid mental health or chronic medical conditions,
experience a major negative life event, or have other risk factors for
depression.
Other professional organizations have already come out in favor of somewhat
more limited screening of adolescents for depression. For example, the
American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that physicians routinely question
adolescents about depression during history taking.
Despite support for screening adolescents for depression, most physicians
don't have systems in place to ensure formal, routine screening. Instead,
physicians might ask some general questions about the adolescent's mood or
changes in behavior, Dr. DeWitt said.
Part of the reason for the failure to do routine preventive screening may be
financial, said Dr. Ted Epperly, president of the American Academy of Family
Physicians. The current reimbursement system doesn't pay physicians for
providing depression screening and when a service isn't paid for, it often
doesn't get done, he said in an interview.
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