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Abstract
Over the past two decades the prevalence of comorbid mental and physical diseases
has increased dramatically, reaching epidemic proportions in many countries. In persons
over the age of sixty the simultaneous presence of two or more diseases has become
the rule rather than an exception. Comorbidity is also increasing rapidly at younger
ages where the negative consequences of comorbid conditions are as numerous and as
troublesome as those that occur at a higher age. There is every reason to believe
that this increasing trend in the proportion of individuals who have comorbid conditions
will continue in the years to come. This prediction is based on several facts: first,
the successes of medicine in prolonging life without curing disease makes it easier
to simultaneously contract two or more illnesses; second, demographic changes (with
an increased proportion of the population reaching a higher age) increase the time
individuals are at risk for a number of late-onset diseases; third, the epidemic spread
of unhealthy life styles increases the likelihood of occurrence of several diseases
which tend to appear together–such as cardiovascular diseases and diabetes; and fourth,
it is possible that deterioration of the environment will lead to a higher intake
of pollutants and abnormalities in the immunological system of humans and, thus, facilitate
the occurrence of allergic and other diseases.
Comorbidity does not mean the simple addition of two diseases that independently follow
their usual trajectories. The simultaneous presence of two or more diseases will worsen
the prognosis of all the diseases that are present, lead to an increasing number (and
severity) of complications, and make the treatment of all of them more difficult and,
possibly, less efficacious. A series of reviews published in recent years provides
ample confirmation of these findings.[1]–[7]
What is worse is that one of the comorbid diseases is often overlooked. This is particularly
true for mental illnesses which are frequently comorbid with physical illnesses. Non-psychiatric
specialists and general practitioners are usually focused on the illness about which
they know a great deal and which they wish to treat, often missing or underestimating
the importance of mental disorders that might also be present. For them the distinction
of the distress that often accompanies serious physical illness (e.g. cancer) and
a mental disorder (such as depression) is rarely clear, so they proceed with single-disease
treatments in the belief that the psychological symptoms associated with the physical
illness will disappear once the physical illness is treated. Specialists in disciplines
other than psychiatry and general practitioners avoid making a diagnosis of mental
illness – partly because of their uncertainty about the diagnosis and treatment of
psychiatric disorders and partly because they would like to avoid the perceived stigmatization
of their patients that occurs when they are labeled as 'mentally ill'.
Psychiatrists are no better than other specialists at identifying comorbid conditions.
They often deal with the mental illness they have extensive experience with and miss
or undertreat a comorbid physical illness – often skipping a medical examination which
might tell them about the presence of another illness. The admission of psychiatrists'
reluctance to deal with physical illnesses in patients whom they treat for a mental
illness is most clearly demonstrated in the creation of a special subdiscipline–liaison
psychiatry. No other medical discipline has a similar subspecialty; there is no liaison
orthopedics or liaison cardiology because it is expected that anyone specialized in
orthopedics will care for their patients' cardiac problems and that anyone specialized
in cardiology will deal with their patients' orthopedic problems. One can hope that
in the future all psychiatrists will acquire sufficient knowledge to diagnose and
treat (or refer) non-psychiatric diseases and that the discipline of liaison psychiatry
will, therefore, become unnecessary. But we are far from this goal. For the time being
we can admire psychiatrists who are able to provide care to people who have a physical
as well as a mental disorder and regret that many cannot or do not wish to do so.
Another discipline that deserves a comment is that of psychosomatics. Many years ago
an expert committee convened by the World Health Organization recommended that the
words psychosomatic medicine and psychosomatic illness should be avoided because when
these terms are used they imply most diseases (i.e., those that are not psychosomatic)
are either purely physical or purely psychological. This recommendation was not widely
followed so there are now many specialists in psychosomatic medicine and several professional
organizations that promote the discipline of psychosomatic medicine focusing on diseases
with physical symptoms in which the role of psychological factors is particularly
prominent. Now that the term is firmly established it is important that specialists
in psychosomatic medicine, psychiatrists and enlightened clinicians in other fields
take it as their goal to promote the notion that all diseases have psychological as
well as somatic components and that the treatment of all diseases requires that equal
attention be given to both of these components.
Appropriate management of comorbidity – at the individual and at the public health
level – will require a significant reorientation of medical education and a reorganization
of health services. General practitioners can be trained to identify and treat patients
with comorbid conditions, but specialists in all disciplines must also assume some
of the responsibility for dealing with the issue of comorbidity in the patients whom
they treat. Health services will have to be adjusted to the fact that most of the
people who come to seek help are likely to suffer from more than one illness. Researchers
will have to give more attention to the commonalities in the pathogenesis of mental
and physical disorders and to the development and assessment of strategies for the
treatment of comorbid conditions. As a first step, all of us will have to accept the
fact that comorbidity of various diseases and in particular the simultaneous occurrence
of mental and physical disorders is the rule rather than an exception and that we
have to approach all our patients with this in mind. We must also make efforts to
convince decision makers, educators, clinicians, and community members that comorbidity
is one of the most urgent challenges to the quality of health care in the early decades
of the twenty first century that must be recognized and dealt with without delay.