Beatriz Olaya , Carlota de Miquel , Lea Francia , Cristina Rodríguez-Prada , Blanca Dolz del Castellar , José Luis Ayuso-Mateos , Josep Maria Haro , Joan Domènech-Abella
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
This paper aims to analyse depression incidence and recurrence rates in a Spanish adult cohort, while also investigating associated risk factors based on depression status at baseline.
Methods
Longitudinal, prospective study data of the Edad con Salud cohort was used, which comprises a sample representative of the non-institutionalized adult populace at the national level with a final sample size of 2655 Spanish adults. Competing risk regression models were estimated to determine the main risk factors for incident and recurrent depression.
Results
The study found depression incidence at 6.11 per 1,000 person years, with recurrence rates up to 47.8 and 21.3 per 1,000 person years in those with depression at baseline and only history of depression, respectively, with higher rates found among women. Sociodemographic factors were found to primarily predict incident depression, while health and mental health indicators were significant predictors for recurrent depression.
Conclusions
Our results confirm the augmented risk of experiencing a new episode among individuals with proximal depression, where different risk factors seemed to play a role depending on episode type and depression proximity. These findings provide valuable insights for developing preventive strategies for depression in both the general population and those at risk.
期刊介绍:
Psychiatry Research offers swift publication of comprehensive research reports and reviews within the field of psychiatry.
The scope of the journal encompasses:
Biochemical, physiological, neuroanatomic, genetic, neurocognitive, and psychosocial determinants of psychiatric disorders.
Diagnostic assessments of psychiatric disorders.
Evaluations that pursue hypotheses about the cause or causes of psychiatric diseases.
Evaluations of pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic psychiatric treatments.
Basic neuroscience studies related to animal or neurochemical models for psychiatric disorders.
Methodological advances, such as instrumentation, clinical scales, and assays directly applicable to psychiatric research.