Cabello Maria, Miret Marta, Caballero Francisco Felix, Chatterji Somnath, Naidoo Nirmala, Kowal Paul, D'Este Catherine, Ayuso-Mateos Jose Luis
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental. CIBERSAM, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain.
Department of psychiatry, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Global Health. 2017 Mar 20;13(1):18. doi: 10.1186/s12992-017-0237-5.
Unhealthy lifestyles and depression are highly interrelated: depression might elicit and exacerbate unhealthy lifestyles and people with unhealthy lifestyles are more likely to become depressed over time. However, few longitudinal evidence of these relationships has been collected in emerging countries. The present study aims i) to analyse whether people with unhealthy lifestyles are more likely to develop depression, and ii) to examine whether depressed people with unhealthy lifestyles are more likely to remain depressed. A total of 7908 participants from Ghana, India, Mexico and Russia were firstly evaluated in the World Health Organization's Study on Global AGEing and Adult Health (SAGE) Wave 0 (2002-2004) and re-evaluated in 2007-2010 (Wave 1). Data on tobacco use, alcohol drinking and physical activity, were collected. Logistic regressions models were employed to assess whether baseline unhealthy lifestyles were related to depression in Wave 1, among people without 12-month depression in Wave 0 and any previous lifetime diagnosis of depression, and to 12-month depression at both study waves (persistent depression).
Baseline daily and non-daily smoking was associated with depression in Wave 1. Low physical activity and heavy alcohol drinking were associated with persistent depression.
Unhealthy lifestyles and depression are also positively related in emerging countries. Smoking on a daily and non-daily basis was longitudinally related to depression. Depressed people with low physical activity and with heavy drinking patterns were more likely to become depressed over time. Several interpretations of these results are given. Further studies should check whether a reduction of these unhealthy lifestyles leads to lower depression rates and/or to a better clinical prognosis of depressed people.
不健康的生活方式与抑郁症高度相关:抑郁症可能引发并加剧不健康的生活方式,随着时间的推移,生活方式不健康的人更有可能患上抑郁症。然而,在新兴国家,很少有关于这些关系的纵向证据被收集。本研究旨在:i)分析生活方式不健康的人是否更有可能患上抑郁症;ii)研究生活方式不健康的抑郁症患者是否更有可能持续抑郁。来自加纳、印度、墨西哥和俄罗斯的7908名参与者首先在世界卫生组织全球老龄化与成人健康研究(SAGE)第0波(2002 - 2004年)中接受评估,并于2007 - 2010年(第1波)进行重新评估。收集了关于烟草使用、饮酒和体育活动的数据。采用逻辑回归模型评估在第0波中无12个月抑郁症且既往无抑郁症终生诊断的人群中,基线不健康生活方式是否与第1波中的抑郁症相关,以及在两个研究波次中是否与12个月抑郁症(持续性抑郁症)相关。
基线时每日和非每日吸烟与第1波中的抑郁症相关。低体育活动和大量饮酒与持续性抑郁症相关。
在新兴国家,不健康的生活方式与抑郁症也呈正相关。每日和非每日吸烟在纵向与抑郁症相关。体育活动少且饮酒量大的抑郁症患者随着时间的推移更有可能持续抑郁。对这些结果给出了几种解释。进一步的研究应检查减少这些不健康的生活方式是否会导致抑郁症发病率降低和/或抑郁症患者有更好的临床预后。