According to the Washington Post (6/20, Bever), primary care professionals may begin asking patients “about feelings of anxiety as part of a routine checkup, based on” a new recommendation statement from the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) published June 20 in JAMA. The USPSTF’s recommendations stem “from concerns about a burgeoning mental health crisis, with growing concerns about depression, anxiety and suicide.” The task force’s “new guidelines state that asymptomatic adults ages 19 through 64, including those who are pregnant and postpartum, should be screened for anxiety disorders, using questionnaires and other screening tools.” While “primary care physicians can prescribe medication,” in those “cases in which the severity of the illness becomes too complex for primary care physicians to manage with medication, a psychiatrist would take over medication management, said” Petros Levounis, MD, MA, President of the American Psychiatric Association.
NBC News (6/20, Edwards) reports, “This is the first time the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has recommended routine mental health screening in primary care settings.” The task force’s “guidance may influence insurance company reimbursements, but” physicians “are not required to follow the group’s recommendations.” The USPSTF’s “recommendations are considered final,” however, “and mirror draft guidance on the topic was released last fall.”
According to Psychiatric News (6/20), Murray B. Stein, MD, MPH, and Linda L. Hill, MD, MPH, both of the University of California, San Diego, wrote an accompanying editorial in which they observed, “The uptake of these new anxiety screening recommendations should provide an impetus and an opportunity for primary care clinicians to become more comfortable with diagnosing and treating anxiety disorders, which may require additional training.”
Also covering the story are MedPage Today (6/20, DePeau-Wilson), Healio (6/20, Bascom), HealthDay(6/20, Gotkine), and HCPlive (6/20, Walter).
Related Links:
— “All adults under 65 should be screened for anxiety, health panel says,” Erika Edwards, NBC News, June 20, 2023