Guerra Mariella, Ferri Cleusa P, Sosa Ana Luisa, Salas Aquiles, Gaona Ciro, Gonzales Victor, de la Torre Gabriela Rojas, Prince Martin
Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Institute de la Memoria y Desordenes Relacionadas, Lima, Peru.
Br J Psychiatry. 2009 Dec;195(6):510-5. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.109.064055.
The proportion of the global population aged 60 and over is increasing, more so in Latin America than any other region. Depression is common among elderly people and an important cause of disability worldwide.
To estimate the prevalence and correlates of late-life depression, associated disability and access to treatment in five locations in Latin America.
A one-phase cross-sectional survey of 5886 people aged 65 and over from urban and rural locations in Peru and Mexico and an urban site in Venezuela. Depression was identified according to DSM-IV and ICD-10 criteria, Geriatric Mental State-Automated Geriatric Examination for Computer Assisted Taxonomy (GMS-AGECAT) algorithm and EURO-D cut-off point. Poisson regression was used to estimate the independent associations of sociodemographic characteristics, economic circumstances and health status with ICD-10 depression.
For DSM-IV major depression overall prevalence varied between 1.3% and 2.8% by site, for ICD-10 depressive episode between 4.5% and 5.1%, for GMS-AGECAT depression between 30.0% and 35.9% and for EURO-D depression between 26.1% and 31.2%; therefore, there was a considerable prevalence of clinically significant depression beyond that identified by ICD-10 and DSM-IV diagnostic criteria. Most older people with depression had never received treatment. Limiting physical impairments and a past history of depression were the two most consistent correlates of the ICD-10 depressive episode.
The treatment gap poses a significant challenge for Latin American health systems, with their relatively weak primary care services and reliance on private specialists; local treatment trials could establish the cost-effectiveness of mental health investment in the government sector.
全球60岁及以上人口的比例正在增加,拉丁美洲的增长幅度高于其他任何地区。抑郁症在老年人中很常见,是全球残疾的一个重要原因。
估计拉丁美洲五个地区晚年抑郁症的患病率、相关因素、伴随的残疾情况以及治疗可及性。
对来自秘鲁和墨西哥城乡地区以及委内瑞拉一个城市地区的5886名65岁及以上的人群进行了单阶段横断面调查。根据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)和《国际疾病分类》第十版(ICD-10)标准、老年精神状态-计算机辅助分类的老年自动检查(GMS-AGECAT)算法以及欧洲抑郁量表(EURO-D)的临界值来确定抑郁症。采用泊松回归来估计社会人口学特征、经济状况和健康状况与ICD-10抑郁症之间的独立关联。
对于DSM-IV重度抑郁症,各调查点的总体患病率在1.3%至2.8%之间;对于ICD-10抑郁发作,患病率在4.5%至5.1%之间;对于GMS-AGECAT抑郁症,患病率在30.0%至35.9%之间;对于EURO-D抑郁症,患病率在26.1%至31.2%之间;因此,临床上显著的抑郁症患病率相当高,超出了ICD-10和DSM-IV诊断标准所确定的范围。大多数患有抑郁症的老年人从未接受过治疗。身体功能受限和既往抑郁症病史是ICD-10抑郁发作最一致的两个相关因素。
治疗缺口对拉丁美洲的卫生系统构成了重大挑战,因为其初级保健服务相对薄弱且依赖私立专科医生;当地的治疗试验可以确定政府部门心理健康投资的成本效益。