Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Crit Care Med. 2012 Aug;40(8):2335-41. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e3182536a81.
To examine whether spouses of patients with severe sepsis are at increased risk for depression independent of the spouse's presepsis history, whether this risk differs by sex, and is associated with a sepsis patient's disability after hospitalization.
Prospective longitudinal cohort study.
Population-based cohort of U.S. adults over 50 yrs old interviewed as part of the Health and Retirement Study (1993-2008).
Nine hundred twenty-nine patient-spouse dyads comprising 1,212 hospitalizations for severe sepsis.
Severe sepsis was identified using a validated algorithm in Medicare claims. Depression was assessed with a modified version of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. All analyses were stratified by gender. The prevalence of substantial depressive symptoms in wives of patients with severe sepsis increased by 14 percentage points at the time of severe sepsis (from 20% at a median of 1.1 yrs presepsis to 34% at a median of 1 yr postsepsis) with an odds ratio of 3.74 (95% confidence interval: 2.20, 6.37), in multivariable regression. Husbands had an 8 percentage point increase in the prevalence of substantial depressive symptoms, which was not significant in multivariable regression (odds ratio 1.90, 95% confidence interval 0.75, 4.71). The increase in depression was not explained by bereavement; women had greater odds of substantial depressive symptoms even when their spouse survived a severe sepsis hospitalization (odds ratio 2.86, 95% confidence interval 1.06, 7.73). Wives of sepsis survivors who were disabled were more likely to be depressed (odds ratio 1.35 per activities of daily living limitation of sepsis survivor, 95% confidence interval 1.12, 1.64); however, controlling for patient disability only slightly attenuated the association between sepsis and wives' depression (odds ratio 2.61, 95% confidence interval 0.93, 7.38).
Older women may be at greater risk for depression if their spouse is hospitalized for severe sepsis. Spouses of patients with severe sepsis may benefit from greater support and depression screening, both when their loved one dies and when their loved one survives.
探讨严重脓毒症患者的配偶在发生严重脓毒症后是否存在抑郁风险增加的情况,以及这种风险是否因性别而异,与住院后脓毒症患者的残疾状况有关。
前瞻性纵向队列研究。
美国 50 岁以上人群的基于人群的队列,作为健康与退休研究(1993-2008 年)的一部分进行访谈。
包括 1212 例严重脓毒症住院患者在内的 929 对患者-配偶。
采用医疗保险索赔中验证过的算法确定严重脓毒症。使用流行病学研究中心抑郁量表的改良版本评估抑郁。所有分析均按性别分层。在严重脓毒症发生时,妻子患严重脓毒症的比例增加了 14 个百分点(中位数为 1.1 年前的 20%,中位数为 1 年后的 34%),多变量回归分析的比值比为 3.74(95%置信区间:2.20,6.37)。丈夫的重度抑郁症状发生率增加了 8 个百分点,但多变量回归分析不显著(比值比 1.90,95%置信区间 0.75,4.71)。抑郁的增加不能用丧偶来解释;即使配偶在严重脓毒症住院后幸存下来,女性也更有可能出现重度抑郁症状(比值比 2.86,95%置信区间 1.06,7.73)。脓毒症幸存者有活动能力限制的妻子更有可能抑郁(每存在一项脓毒症幸存者的活动能力限制,比值比为 1.35,95%置信区间为 1.12,1.64);然而,仅控制患者的残疾程度,仅略微减弱了脓毒症与妻子抑郁之间的关联(比值比为 2.61,95%置信区间为 0.93,7.38)。
如果配偶因严重脓毒症住院,老年女性可能面临更大的抑郁风险。严重脓毒症患者的配偶可能需要更多的支持和抑郁筛查,无论他们所爱的人去世还是幸存下来。