Scott K M, Von Korff M, Alonso J, Angermeyer M, Bromet E J, Bruffaerts R, de Girolamo G, de Graaf R, Fernandez A, Gureje O, He Y, Kessler R C, Kovess V, Levinson D, Medina-Mora M E, Mneimneh Z, Oakley Browne M A, Posada-Villa J, Tachimori H, Williams D
Department of Psychological Medicine, Otago University, Wellington, New Zealand.
Psychol Med. 2008 Nov;38(11):1659-69. doi: 10.1017/S0033291708003413. Epub 2008 May 19.
Physical morbidity is a potent risk factor for depression onset and clearly increases with age, yet prior research has often found depressive disorders to decrease with age. This study tests the possibility that the relationship between age and mental disorders differs as a function of physical co-morbidity.
Eighteen general population surveys were carried out among household-residing adults as part of the World Mental Health (WMH) surveys initiative (n=42 697). DSM-IV disorders were assessed using face-to-face interviews with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0). The effect of age was estimated for 12-month depressive and/or anxiety disorders with and without physical or pain co-morbidity, and for physical and/or pain conditions without mental co-morbidity.
Depressive and anxiety disorders decreased with age, a result that cannot be explained by organic exclusion criteria. No significant difference was found in the relationship between mental disorders and age as a function of physical/pain co-morbidity. The majority of older persons have chronic physical or pain conditions without co-morbid mental disorders; by contrast, the majority of those with mental disorders have physical/pain co-morbidity, particularly among the older age groups.
CIDI-diagnosed depressive and anxiety disorders in the general population decrease with age, despite greatly increasing physical morbidity with age. Physical morbidity among persons with mental disorder is the norm, particularly in older populations. Health professionals, including mental health professionals, need to address barriers to the management of physical co-morbidity among those with mental disorders.
身体疾病是抑郁症发病的一个重要危险因素,且明显随年龄增长而增加,但先前的研究常常发现抑郁症患病率会随年龄增长而下降。本研究检验了年龄与精神障碍之间的关系因身体共病情况不同而存在差异的可能性。
作为世界心理健康(WMH)调查倡议的一部分,对居家成年人进行了18项一般人群调查(n = 42697)。使用复合国际诊断访谈(CIDI 3.0)通过面对面访谈评估《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)中的疾病。对伴有和不伴有身体或疼痛共病的12个月抑郁和/或焦虑症,以及不伴有精神共病的身体和/或疼痛状况,估计年龄的影响。
抑郁和焦虑症随年龄增长而减少,这一结果无法用器质性排除标准来解释。未发现精神障碍与年龄之间的关系因身体/疼痛共病情况不同而存在显著差异。大多数老年人患有慢性身体或疼痛疾病,但无共病精神障碍;相比之下,大多数患有精神障碍的人存在身体/疼痛共病,尤其是在老年人群体中。
尽管随着年龄增长身体疾病大幅增加,但一般人群中由CIDI诊断的抑郁和焦虑症却随年龄增长而减少。精神障碍患者存在身体疾病是常态,尤其是在老年人群中。包括心理健康专业人员在内的卫生专业人员需要解决精神障碍患者身体共病管理方面的障碍。