Author:
GEERLINGS S. W.,BEEKMAN A. T. F.,DEEG D. J. H.,VAN TILBURG W.
Abstract
Background. Poor physical health has long been recognized to be one of the most important risk
factors for depression in older adults. Since many aspects of physical health can be targeted for
improvement in primary care, it is important to know whether physical health problems predict the
onset and/or the persistence of depression.Methods. The study is based on a sample which at the outset consisted of 327 depressed and 325
non-depressed older adults (55–85) drawn from a larger random community-based sample in the
Netherlands. Depression was measured using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression
scale (CES-D) at eight successive waves.Results. From all incident episodes, the majority (57%) was short-lived. These short episodes could
generally not be predicted by physical health problems. The remaining incident episodes (43%)
were not short-lived and could be predicted by poor physical health. Chronicity (34%) was also
predicted by physical health problems.Conclusions. The study design with its frequent measurements recognized more incident cases than
previous studies; these cases however did have a better prognosis than is often assumed. The
prognosis of prevalent cases was rather poor. Physical health problems were demonstrated to be a
predictor of both the onset and the persistence of depression. This may well have implications for
prevention and intervention.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
172 articles.
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