PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Qureshi, Naseem A. AU - Al-Habeeb, Tariq A. AU - Al-Ghamdy, Yasser S. AU - Magzoub, Mohi M. AU - Schmidt, Henk TI - Psychiatric referrals. In primary care and general hospitals in Qassim Region, Saudi Arabia DP - 2001 Jul 01 TA - Saudi Medical Journal PG - 619--624 VI - 22 IP - 7 4099 - http://smj.org.sa/content/22/7/619.short 4100 - http://smj.org.sa/content/22/7/619.full SO - Saudi Med J2001 Jul 01; 22 AB - OBJECTIVE: From different perspectives, psychiatric symptoms have special significance in psychiatry. This study comparatively describes the psychopathological symptoms as noted in primary care (402) and general hospital (138) referrals.METHODS: Five hundred and forty psychiatric referrals, retrieved randomly, were reviewed extensively for collecting relevant data.RESULTS: Both hospital and primary care referrals were observed to have a variety of psychological and somatic symptoms of variable frequencies, which were suggestive of several psychopathological domains. Functional psychotic (19.5% versus 10%), mood (27.5% versus 23%) and psychosomatic (7% versus 2%) symptoms were significantly noted in hospital referrals as compared to primary care referrals while the later were observed to have significantly more somatic (34.5% versus 22.5%) and neurological (8% versus 4%) symptoms. Only a small proportion of primary care referrals (33/402, 8%] have symptoms of childhood psychiatric disorders.CONCLUSION: Psychiatric symptomatology differs in primary care and general hospital referrals. Both the general practitioners and clinicians are expected to record psychiatric symptoms in a comprehensive manner. Hence, they need condensed training courses on psychiatric symptomatology.