Neff J A
J Nerv Ment Dis. 1983 Sep;171(9):546-52. doi: 10.1097/00005053-198309000-00004.
Evidence regarding the recent suggestion of greater prevalence of depressive symptoms in urban than in rural communities is evaluated. National data are reviewed which indicate that, whereas depressive symptoms may be less prevalent in rural than in urban communities, mean depression scores of residents of rural farm areas outside of standard metropolitan statistical areas are almost as high as scores of center city residents. Further data are presented from a study of urban and rural Florida residents which indicate a significantly higher mean number of depressive symptoms in urban than rural areas, though this difference was eliminated by controls for income, education, age, and sex. When persistent depressive symptoms were examined, urban-rural differences were not significant. The implications of the present findings for urban-rural differences in depressive disorder are considered and the need to examine the urbanicity hypothesis on a data base allowing appropriate controls for socioeconomic status-related variables and migration is emphasized.
对近期有关城市社区抑郁症状患病率高于农村社区这一观点的证据进行了评估。回顾了全国数据,这些数据表明,虽然农村社区的抑郁症状患病率可能低于城市社区,但标准大都市统计区域以外农村农业地区居民的平均抑郁得分几乎与中心城市居民的得分一样高。还展示了一项对佛罗里达州城乡居民的研究中的进一步数据,该数据表明城市地区的平均抑郁症状数量显著高于农村地区,不过通过对收入、教育程度、年龄和性别的控制,这种差异消失了。当研究持续性抑郁症状时,城乡差异并不显著。考虑了当前研究结果对城乡抑郁障碍差异的影响,并强调有必要在一个能够对与社会经济地位相关的变量和迁移进行适当控制的数据库上检验城市化假设。