Author:
OLDEHINKEL A. J.,WITTCHEN H.-U.,SCHUSTER P.
Abstract
Background. This article presents prospective longitudinal findings on prevalence, incidence,
patterns of change and stability of depressive disorders in a community sample of 1228 adolescents.Methods. Data were collected at baseline and follow-up (20 months later) in a representative
population sample of 1228 adolescents, aged 14–17 at baseline. Diagnostic assessment was based on
the Munich Composite International Diagnostic Interview (M-CIDI).Results. The overall cumulative lifetime incidence of any depressive condition was 20·0% (major
depressive disorder (MDD), 12·2%; dysthymia, 3·5%; subthreshold MDD, 6·3%), of which about
one-third were incident depressions in the period between baseline and follow-up. Depressive
disorders rarely started before the age of 13. Females were about twice as likely as males to develop
a depressive disorder. Overall, the 20-month outcome of baseline depression was unfavourable.
Dysthymia had the poorest outcome of all, with a complete remission rate of only 33% versus 43%
for MDD and 54% for subthreshold MDD. Dysthymia also had the highest number of depressive
episodes, and most psychosocial impairment and suicidal behavioural during follow-up. Treatment
rates were low (8–23%). Subthreshold MDD associated with considerable impairment had an
almost identical course and outcome as threshold MDD.Conclusions. DSM-IV MDD and dysthymia are rare before the age of 13, but frequent during
adolescence, with an estimated lifetime cumulative incidence of 14%. Only a minority of these
disorders in adolescence is treated, and more than half of them persist or remit only partly.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
104 articles.
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