Author:
PRINCE M. J.,HARWOOD R. H.,BLIZARD R. A.,THOMAS A.,MANN A. H.
Abstract
Background. An association between disablement and
late-life depression is often reported in cross-sectional studies.
However, many lack effect sizes, and do not control for confounding.
Therefore, it is difficult both to quantify the overall impact of poor
health on depression and to understand which aspects are most
salient.Methods. A catchment area survey of all over 65-year-old
residents of an electoral district in London, UK, using a population
register derived from a door-to-door census was undertaken. Depression
was measured using SHORT-CARE, and the consequences of disease
classified according to the WHO International Classification of
Impairments, Disabilities and Handicaps.Results. Six hundred and fifty-four subjects were
interviewed out of an older population of 889. The prevalence of
SHORT-CARE pervasive depression was 17%. Impairment, disability and,
particularly, handicap were strongly associated with depression. The
adjusted odds ratio for depression in the most handicapped quartile
compared with the least was 24·2
(8·8–66·6). The population attributable fraction
(PAF) for depression attributable to handicap was 0·78. The
PAFs for recent life events and female gender were much lower.
Handicap explained most of the depression associated with individual
impairments and disabilities. Adjusting for handicap abolished or
weakened the associations between depression and social support,
income, older age, female gender and living alone.Conclusions. Even given some uncertainty in distinguishing
handicap and depression as constructs, and the impossibility of
deciding direction of causality, it seems likely that handicap is of
central significance to late-life depression. Handicap may be more
amenable to intervention than either impairment or
disability.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
166 articles.
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