Objective: To measure the level of distress among frequent attenders of primary health care.
Design: A cross-sectional study.
Setting: Two public primary health care stations in Turku, south-western Finland
Participants: 96 frequent attenders (eleven or more visits to a physician during the previous 12 months) and 466 control patients.
Main outcome measure: SCL-25, GP evaluations, self-reported symptoms and self-experienced need for care.
Results: Frequent attenders were significantly more distressed than other patients in primary care. However, their self-experienced need for psychiatric care was very low and it did not differ from other patients self-experienced need. The GPs estimated that over 1/3 of frequent attenders suffered from mixed (physical and psychiatric) illnesses and over 1/2 from subclinical or clinical psychiatric symptoms. The corresponding proportions for other patients were significantly lower.