Pfaff Jon J, Draper Brian M, Pirkis Jane E, Stocks Nigel P, Snowdon John A, Sim Moira G, Byrne Gerard J, Lautenschlager Nicola T, Flicker Leon A, Kerse Ngaire M, Goldney Robert D, Almeida Osvaldo P
Western Australian Centre for Health and Ageing, Perth, WA, Australia.
Med J Aust. 2009 Apr 6;190(S7):S75-80. doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2009.tb02475.x.
To estimate the prevalence of depression among older Australians with common medical morbidities, and to determine the association between poor physical health and depression in this age group.
Cross-sectional, postal questionnaire survey.
20 183 community-dwelling adults aged 60 years and over, under the care of 383 general practitioners participating in the Depression and Early Prevention of Suicide in General Practice (DEPS-GP) project (conducted between 2005 and 2008; the data in this article were collected during the baseline phase of the study in 2005).
Depressive symptoms (measured by the nine-item depression scale of the Patient Health Questionnaire), health status (measured by the 12-item Short Form Health Survey and a medical morbidity inventory), social support (measured by the subjective support subscale from the Duke Social Support Index), and demographic and lifestyle information.
18 190 participants (90.1%) reported having at least one chronic physical health condition, while 1493 (7.1%) experienced clinically significant depression (3.1% major depressive syndrome; 4.0% other depressive syndrome). Most chronic physical illnesses were associated with increased odds of depression, and participants with numerous medical morbidities and a high level of functional impairment were three to four times more likely to have a depressive illness.
Depression is more the exception than the rule in later life, and among those who are medically unwell, the level of associated impairment may determine their risk of depression more than their acquired physical illness. Many of the factors associated with depression in medically ill patients are amenable to treatment, and GPs are in a unique position to address this important public health issue.
评估患有常见疾病的澳大利亚老年人中抑郁症的患病率,并确定该年龄组中身体健康状况不佳与抑郁症之间的关联。
横断面邮政问卷调查。
20183名年龄在60岁及以上的社区居住成年人,由参与“全科医疗中抑郁症与自杀早期预防”(DEPS-GP)项目的383名全科医生负责诊疗(该项目于2005年至2008年开展;本文中的数据收集于2005年研究的基线阶段)。
抑郁症状(通过患者健康问卷的九项抑郁量表测量)、健康状况(通过12项简短健康调查问卷和一份疾病清单测量)、社会支持(通过杜克社会支持指数的主观支持子量表测量)以及人口统计学和生活方式信息。
18190名参与者(90.1%)报告至少患有一种慢性身体疾病,而1493名(7.1%)经历了具有临床意义的抑郁症(3.1%为重度抑郁综合征;4.0%为其他抑郁综合征)。大多数慢性身体疾病与抑郁症的患病几率增加相关,患有多种疾病且功能损害程度高的参与者患抑郁症的可能性是常人的三到四倍。
在晚年,抑郁症更多是个别情况而非普遍现象,在身体不适的人群中,相关损害程度可能比所患身体疾病更能决定其患抑郁症的风险。许多与患病患者抑郁症相关的因素都可以得到治疗,全科医生在解决这一重要公共卫生问题方面具有独特地位。