My aim on this thread is to share the results of my digging into this question over the last couple of days. I have found several papers with very different figures and will post them in a series of posts here.
The 52% claim:
The UK document, Guidance for commissioners of services for people with medically unexplained symptoms includes on page 6 the claim that:
The primary source for this statement is given as this paper based on a study over 20 years ago by Wessely et al:
Nimnuan, T., Hotopf, M., and Wessely, S. Medically unexplained symptoms: an epidemiological study in seven specialties. J Psychosom Res 2001; 51: 361–367.
Accessing the full paper on sci hub here
I have copied this from it:
Page 4
My comments
The rest of the paper looked at demographic factors. They were surprised not to find an association between MUS and psych symptoms or disability level on their questionnaires.
Limitations of the study:
- The study was done in a tertiary care hospital, so is not representative of all patients.
- Only 62% of patients selected for the study responded and had sufficient data to be included. They did not investigate whether this was a skewed subset, perhaps patients with unexplained symptoms more eager to give feedback.
My conclusion:
52% of the 62% who provided data had at least one MUS symptom,
So of the initial 890 patients asked to take part:
32% reported at least one MUS symptom,
30% reported no unexplained symptoms,
38% didn’t respond and were not investigated for MUS.
I would conclude that somewhere between 32% and 52% had at least one symptom that remained undiagnosed. It is not clear from the paper whether the unexplained symptoms were the primary presenting symptom or a minor symptom that was not investigated or resolved naturally or whether any of the unexplained symptoms necessitated any repeat visits.
See next post for more studies.
My interest in this was stimulated by this post by @Diane O'Leary where she says:
The 52% claim:
The UK document, Guidance for commissioners of services for people with medically unexplained symptoms includes on page 6 the claim that:
Given the wide-ranging symptoms that can occur, patients have high rates of access to a number of outpatient departments. On average, 52% of patients accessing outpatient services have MUS, with the highest rates relating to gynaecology clinics (66%) and the lowest rate (37%) relating to dental services.
The primary source for this statement is given as this paper based on a study over 20 years ago by Wessely et al:
Nimnuan, T., Hotopf, M., and Wessely, S. Medically unexplained symptoms: an epidemiological study in seven specialties. J Psychosom Res 2001; 51: 361–367.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:
This study aimed to estimate the prevalence and risk factors for medically unexplained symptoms across a variety of specialities.
METHODS:
A cross-sectional survey was conducted at two general hospitals in southeast London between 1995 and 1997. Eight hundred and ninety consecutive new patients from seven outpatient clinics were included. Demographic and clinical characteristic variables were assessed.
RESULTS:
Five hundred eighty-two (65%) of the subjects surveyed returned completed questionnaires. A final diagnosis was available in 550 (62%). Two hundred twenty-eight (52%) fulfilled criteria for medically unexplained symptoms. The highest prevalence was in the gynecology clinic (66%). After adjustment for confounders, medically unexplained symptoms were associated with being female, younger, and currently employed. Psychiatric morbidity per se was not associated with the presence of medically unexplained symptoms, but was more likely in those complaining of multiple symptoms. Those with medically unexplained symptoms were less disabled, but more likely to use alternative treatment in comparison with those whose symptoms were medically explained. Patients with medically unexplained symptoms were more likely to attribute their illness to physical causes as opposed to lifestyle factors.
CONCLUSIONS:
Medically unexplained symptoms are common across general/internal medicine and represent the most common diagnosis in some specialities. Medical behavior, training, and management need to take this into account.
Accessing the full paper on sci hub here
I have copied this from it:
Page 4
Page 6Prevalence and risk factors for medically unexplained symptoms
Approximately half (52%) of new attenders at the clinics above had at least one medically unexplained symptom.
[see later post - this seems to be wrong]Comment
Medically unexplained symptoms were defined as current somatic complaints reported by patients for which conventional biomedical explanation could not be found on routine examination or investigations rated 3 months after the initial appointment….
...
Our result show that between one third and two thirds of patients attending general medical clinics do not receive a biomedical explanation of their distress.
Previous studies have suggested this in individual clinics, for example, only 16% of one clinics new outpatient attendees to a US internal medicine clinic was a definite biomedical cause identified for symptoms. [Kroenke et al]
[I haven’t managed to access this paper yet]Van Hemert et al conducted a survey in a Dutch medical outpatient clinic showed that 52% of new referrals remained medically unexplained.’’
My comments
The rest of the paper looked at demographic factors. They were surprised not to find an association between MUS and psych symptoms or disability level on their questionnaires.
Limitations of the study:
- The study was done in a tertiary care hospital, so is not representative of all patients.
- Only 62% of patients selected for the study responded and had sufficient data to be included. They did not investigate whether this was a skewed subset, perhaps patients with unexplained symptoms more eager to give feedback.
My conclusion:
52% of the 62% who provided data had at least one MUS symptom,
So of the initial 890 patients asked to take part:
32% reported at least one MUS symptom,
30% reported no unexplained symptoms,
38% didn’t respond and were not investigated for MUS.
I would conclude that somewhere between 32% and 52% had at least one symptom that remained undiagnosed. It is not clear from the paper whether the unexplained symptoms were the primary presenting symptom or a minor symptom that was not investigated or resolved naturally or whether any of the unexplained symptoms necessitated any repeat visits.
See next post for more studies.
My interest in this was stimulated by this post by @Diane O'Leary where she says:
Roughly speaking, 50% of outpatients' symptoms fall into that category (or at least this the figure you generally find in practice guidelines). The health system in the UK actually says 52%, so the majority of the time when people go to a doctor outside the hospital, the doctor concludes that the problem is MUS.
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