Department of Psychiatry, Federal University of São Paulo (Escola Paulista de Medicina - UNIFESP), São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
J Affect Disord. 2018 May;232:204-211. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2018.02.023. Epub 2018 Feb 17.
Estimating 12-month prevalence of depression, anxiety, and comorbid anxiety/depression in noninstitutionalized adults (age 15-75) in two violence-prone cities.
The Composite International Diagnostic Interview v2.1 (Portuguese), administered in population-representative surveys (age 15-75) in São Paulo (N = 2536) and Rio de Janeiro (N = 1208), yielded 12-month prevalence of violent events experienced, and DSM-IV diagnoses of depression and anxiety, which were classified into mutually exclusive groups: 1) no anxiety/depression; 2) anxiety only; 3) depression only; 4) comorbid anxiety/depression. Weighted analyses estimated 12-month prevalence, multinomial logistic regression compared the demographic characteristics of the diagnosis groups, and association with experienced violence.
Twelve-month prevalence of anxiety alone, depression alone, and comorbid anxiety/depression was 12.7% (of whom 24.9% were also depressed), 4.9% (of whom 46.2% had anxiety), and 4.2% respectively for São Paulo; and 12.1% (18.2% of whom were depressed), 4.6% (37.0% with anxiety), and 2.7% respectively for Rio de Janeiro. All conditions were approximately twice as prevalent in women than in men in both cities. In São Paulo, comorbidity was associated with age under 60, depression alone was more prevalent among 30-59 year olds, but in 23-29 year-olds in Rio de Janeiro. Exposure to violence increased the odds of anxiety, depression, and their comorbidity. With rare exception, marital status, education, and race/ethnicity were not associated with anxiety, depression, or their comorbidity.
Cross-sectional design.
Prevalence rates for all conditions were high, and particularly associated with exposure to violence. Means to ameliorate violence, and its mental health effects, particularly for women, are needed.
在两个暴力频发城市的非住院成年人群体(15-75 岁)中,评估抑郁、焦虑和共病性焦虑/抑郁的 12 个月患病率。
使用复合国际诊断访谈第 2.1 版(葡萄牙语),在圣保罗(2536 人)和里约热内卢(1208 人)的代表性人群调查中进行评估,得出了经历过的暴力事件和 DSM-IV 诊断为抑郁和焦虑的 12 个月患病率,并将其分为相互排斥的组别:1)无焦虑/抑郁;2)仅焦虑;3)仅抑郁;4)共病性焦虑/抑郁。加权分析估计了 12 个月的患病率,多变量逻辑回归比较了各诊断组的人口统计学特征,并与经历的暴力事件进行了关联。
在圣保罗,仅有焦虑、仅有抑郁和共病性焦虑/抑郁的 12 个月患病率分别为 12.7%(其中 24.9%也患有抑郁)、4.9%(其中 46.2%有焦虑)和 4.2%;而在里约热内卢,分别为 12.1%(其中 18.2%患有抑郁)、4.6%(37.0%有焦虑)和 2.7%。在两个城市中,所有疾病的女性患病率均约为男性的两倍。在圣保罗,共病与 60 岁以下年龄有关,仅有抑郁在 30-59 岁人群中更为普遍,但在里约热内卢的 23-29 岁人群中则相反。暴露于暴力会增加焦虑、抑郁及其共病的可能性。除了极少数例外,婚姻状况、教育程度和种族/民族与焦虑、抑郁或其共病无关。
横断面设计。
所有疾病的患病率都很高,尤其是与暴露于暴力有关。需要采取措施来减轻暴力及其对心理健康的影响,特别是针对女性。