Department of Psychiatry, Medical School, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Department of Neuroscience, FMABC University Center, Santo André, Brazil.
Int Rev Psychiatry. 2022 Feb;34(1):6-15. doi: 10.1080/09540261.2022.2040450. Epub 2022 Feb 19.
This report presents the prevalence of mental and substance use disorders around the world discussing the impact of geographical, sociodemographic, and income characteristics on national epidemiological differences. We analysed data from the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation database published in 2019. The global prevalence of mental disorders was 13.0%, with higher prevalence of anxiety disorders rate (4.1%), followed by depressive disorders (3.8%, including major depressive disorder 2.49% and dysthymia 1.35%), intellectual disability (1.5%), ADHD (1.1%), conduct disorders (0.5%), bipolar disorders (0.5%), autism spectrum disorder s (0.4%), schizophrenia (0.3%), and eating disorders (0.2%, including bulimia nervosa 0.13% and anorexia nervosa 0.05%). The worldwide prevalence of substance-use disorders was 2.2%, not surprisingly, with higher prevalence of alcohol-use disorders (1.5%) than other drug-use disorders (0.8% total including: cannabis 0.32%; opioid 0.29%, amphetamine 0.10%; cocaine 0.06%). In general, high-income countries reported higher levels of mental and substance use disorders, with the exceptions of conduct and depressive disorders (no significant differences were found among low- and high-income countries), and intellectual disability (with higher prevalence in low-income countries). In regions of the America's prevalence rates of mental and substance use disorders were higher than in Europe. Western Pacific countries reported high levels of schizophrenia, and depressive disorders were highly prevalent in Africa as well as in the Americas. Intellectual disability reported higher rates in Eastern Mediterranean and South-East Asia. We discuss the cross-cultural variations in mental health expenditure and literacy as well as stigma-related factors and some of the environmental risk factors possibly related to these prevalence differences.
本报告介绍了全球精神和物质使用障碍的流行情况,讨论了地理、社会人口和收入特征对国家流行病学差异的影响。我们分析了 2019 年发表在卫生计量与评估研究所数据库中的数据。全球精神障碍患病率为 13.0%,焦虑障碍患病率较高(4.1%),其次是抑郁障碍(3.8%,包括重度抑郁症 2.49%和心境恶劣 1.35%)、智力残疾(1.5%)、注意缺陷多动障碍(1.1%)、品行障碍(0.5%)、双相情感障碍(0.5%)、自闭症谱系障碍(0.4%)、精神分裂症(0.3%)和饮食障碍(0.2%,包括神经性贪食症 0.13%和神经性厌食症 0.05%)。全球物质使用障碍患病率为 2.2%,不出所料,酒精使用障碍患病率较高(1.5%),其他药物使用障碍患病率较低(总体为 0.8%,包括大麻 0.32%;阿片类 0.29%,安非他命 0.10%;可卡因 0.06%)。一般来说,高收入国家报告的精神和物质使用障碍水平较高,但品行障碍和抑郁障碍除外(低收入和高收入国家之间没有发现显著差异),以及智力残疾(在低收入国家更为普遍)。在美洲,精神和物质使用障碍的流行率高于欧洲。西太平洋国家报告的精神分裂症发病率较高,非洲以及美洲的抑郁障碍发病率也较高。智力残疾在东地中海和东南亚地区的发病率较高。我们讨论了精神卫生支出和文化素养方面的跨文化差异,以及与耻辱感相关的因素和一些可能与这些流行率差异有关的环境风险因素。