Mathias Sarah, Koerber Anne, Fadavi Sharbanoo, Punwani Indru
College of Dentistry, University of Illinois at Chicago, 60612, USA.
J Am Dent Assoc. 2005 Oct;136(10):1388-95. doi: 10.14219/jada.archive.2005.0052.
Stress, burnout, substance abuse and suicide among dentists have been studied, yet no study in the United States has specifically addressed depression in e dentists. The objective of the authors' study was to determine if sex and dental specialty were correlated with depression in dentists.
The authors conducted a survey of a sample of dentists chosen randomly from the American Dental Association's mailing list of member dentists. The survey, stratified by sex and specialty, resulted in 560 responses, for a 53 percent response rate. The authors used the Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale to measure depression. The authors examined the respondents' sex, age, number of children, marital status, specialty, practice type, location of practice, years in practice and hours worked per week.
The rate of depression in the overall sample was 9 percent. Sex was associated with depression (P < .001), but specialty was not. However, multiple regression analysis found that sex was significantly related to depression in only two specialties: periodontics and pediatric dentistry. Overall, the regression model explained an unimpressive 6 percent of the variance in depression scores. The most important finding of the study was that only 15 percent of depressed dentists were receiving treatment.
The survey results showed that only female pediatric dentists and periodontists were more depressed than their male counterparts. None of the other variables studied contributed significantly to the understanding of depression in dentists. Depressed dentists, like other depressed people, tend not to seek treatment.
Depression and serious depression occur among dentists, and much of it is untreated. Because depression is harmful to dentists and raises quality-of-care issues, they should be educated to help them recognize depression and encouraged to seek treatment.
牙科医生的压力、职业倦怠、药物滥用和自杀问题已得到研究,但美国尚无专门针对牙科医生抑郁症的研究。作者开展这项研究的目的是确定性别和牙科专业是否与牙科医生的抑郁症相关。
作者对从美国牙科协会会员牙医邮件列表中随机选取的一组牙医进行了调查。该调查按性别和专业分层,共收到560份回复,回复率为53%。作者使用zung自评抑郁量表来测量抑郁症。作者调查了受访者的性别、年龄、子女数量、婚姻状况、专业、执业类型、执业地点、执业年限和每周工作时长。
整个样本中的抑郁症患病率为9%。性别与抑郁症相关(P<0.001),但专业与抑郁症无关。然而,多元回归分析发现,仅在两个专业中,性别与抑郁症显著相关:牙周病学和儿童牙科。总体而言,回归模型仅解释了抑郁症得分差异中6%的不显著部分。该研究最重要的发现是,只有15%的抑郁症牙科医生正在接受治疗。
调查结果显示,只有女性儿童牙科医生和牙周病医生比男性同行更容易患抑郁症。所研究的其他变量均未对理解牙科医生的抑郁症有显著贡献。与其他抑郁症患者一样,抑郁症牙科医生往往不寻求治疗。
抑郁症和重度抑郁症在牙科医生中存在,且许多病例未得到治疗。由于抑郁症对牙科医生有害并引发医疗质量问题,应对他们进行教育,帮助其识别抑郁症,并鼓励他们寻求治疗。