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Psychiatric comorbidities affect 25% of AD patients. Here, a check list on when to screen, when to refer, and how to prevent accumulated psychological burden in primary care.
Primary care clinicians hold a unique position in the care of patients with atopic dermatitis; they often serve as the only clinician who sees both the visible skin disease and the less obvious toll it takes on daily functioning, relationships, and emotional wellbeing.
It has become clear that psychiatric comorbidities are common, predictable, and frequently overlooked. Yet with straightforward screening questions, attention to functional outcomes alongside clinical measures, and appropriate thresholds for specialty referral, primary care can become a critical point of intervention that prevents years of accumulated psychological burden.
The goal extends beyond controlling inflammation to restoring a patient's ability to participate fully in life—at school, at work, and in relationships that matter. This shift in perspective, from managing a rash to supporting a person, is what transforms routine dermatologic care into genuinely life-changing medicine.
The following takeaway points summarize the key themes in this 6-article series.
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