Author:
KENDLER K. S.,WALTERS E. E.,KESSLER R. C.
Abstract
In order to examine factors that influence the time to recovery (TTR) from depressive
episodes in women, we examined members of 1030 female–female twin pairs of known zygosity,
ascertained from a population-based twin registry. We predicted, in a Cox model, TTR in 235
women with an onset of an episode of major depression (MD) in the last year meeting DSM-III-R
criteria. The median and mean TTR for episodes of MD was 42 and 82 days, respectively ; only
2·2% of women had not recovered by 1 year. Four variables predicted TTR: financial difficulties,
obsessive–compulsive symptoms, severe life events (SLEs), and genetic risk. Dividing all depressive
episodes meeting symptomatic DSM-III-R criteria into early (5–28 days) and late (>28 days)
phases, significant predictors of TTR early in the course of illness (income, parental protectiveness
and separation, personality, lifetime traumas and SLEs) differed from those that predicted TTR
later in the depressive episode (health, social support, obsessive–compulsive symptoms, SLEs and
genetic risk). Including cases with chronic MD increased the strength of personality, financial
problems and genetic risk as predictors of slow TTR. These exploratory analyses suggest that TTR
from MD in women is influenced by multiple environmental, temperamental and genetic factors.
Predictors of TTR early and later in the course of MD may differ qualitatively, suggesting different
processes in recovery from brief versus prolonged depressions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
72 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献