Bell Ronny A, Smith Shannon L, Arcury Thomas A, Snively Beverly M, Stafford Jeanette M, Quandt Sara A
Department of Public Health Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd., Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1063, USA.
Diabetes Care. 2005 Apr;28(4):823-9. doi: 10.2337/diacare.28.4.823.
Depression is associated with morbidity, mortality, and decreased quality of life and is a well-established complication among people with diabetes. Little is known about the prevalence and correlates of depressive symptoms among older adults living in rural communities, particularly among ethnic minority groups, who are at increased risk of developing diabetes and complications.
Data were analyzed from the ELDER (Evaluating Long-term Diabetes Self-management Among Elder Rural Adults) diabetes study in which face-to-face interviews were conducted with 696 older (> or =65 years of age) African-American, Native American, and white men and women in two rural counties in central North Carolina.
Using a criterion of > or =9 on a modified CES-D (Center for Epidemiologic Study of Depression) scale, 15.8% of the sample had depressive symptoms. In bivariate analyses, depressive symptomatology was more common among women and individuals who were unmarried and had less than a high school education, fewer financial resources, more chronic conditions, more prescription medications, and lower physical functioning. In multivariate analyses, sex, education, living arrangement, BMI, number of prescription medications, number of chronic conditions, and physical functioning remained significant.
These results show that older rural adults with diabetes are at high risk for depressive symptoms, regardless of their ethnic group, and that certain demographic and health characteristics are important factors in this association. These findings add to the limited body of knowledge of comorbid depression in this population. Greater attention should be paid to diagnosing and treating this condition by those who provide care to these populations.
抑郁症与发病率、死亡率及生活质量下降相关,是糖尿病患者中一种公认的并发症。对于居住在农村社区的老年人,尤其是少数民族群体中抑郁症状的患病率及相关因素知之甚少,而这些群体患糖尿病及并发症的风险更高。
对ELDER(评估老年农村成年人长期糖尿病自我管理)糖尿病研究的数据进行分析,该研究对北卡罗来纳州中部两个农村县的696名年龄在65岁及以上的非裔美国人、美国原住民和白人男性及女性进行了面对面访谈。
使用改良的流调中心抑郁量表(CES-D)评分≥9作为标准,15.8%的样本有抑郁症状。在双变量分析中,抑郁症状在女性、未婚者、未接受过高中教育者、经济资源较少者、慢性病较多者、处方药较多者及身体功能较差者中更为常见。在多变量分析中,性别、教育程度、居住安排、体重指数、处方药数量、慢性病数量及身体功能仍具有显著性。
这些结果表明,患有糖尿病的农村老年人无论其种族如何,都有出现抑郁症状的高风险,且某些人口统计学和健康特征是这种关联中的重要因素。这些发现增加了关于该人群中抑郁症合并症的有限知识。为这些人群提供护理的人员应更加重视对这种情况的诊断和治疗。