Author:
MURPHY J. M.,LAIRD N. M.,MONSON R. R.,SOBOL A. M.,LEIGHTON A. H.
Abstract
Background. The Stirling County Study provides a 40-year perspective on the epidemiology of
psychiatric disorders in an adult population in Atlantic Canada. Across samples selected in 1952,
1970 and 1992 current prevalence of depression was stable. This paper concerns time trends in
annual incidence as assessed through cohorts selected from the first two samples.Methods. Consistent interview data were analysed by a computerized diagnostic algorithm. The
cohorts consisted of subjects at risk for a first depression: Cohort-1 (N = 575) was followed
1952–1970; Cohort-2 (N = 639) was followed 1970–1992. Life-table methods were used to calculate
incidence rates and proportional hazards procedures were used for statistical assessment.Results. Average annual incidence of depression was 4·5 per 1000 for Cohort-1 and 3·7 for Cohort-
2. Differences by gender, age and time were not statistically significant. The stability of incidence
and the similarity of distribution by gender and age in these two cohorts corresponds to findings
about the two early samples. In contrast, current prevalence in the recent sample was distributed
differently and showed an increase among women under 45 years.Conclusions. The stability of the incidence of depression emphasizes the distinctive characteristics
of current prevalence in the recent sample and suggests that the dominance of women in rates of
depression may have occurred among those born after the Second World War. The results offer
partial support for the interpretation of an increase in depression based on retrospective data in
other recent studies but they indicate that the increase is specific to women.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
80 articles.
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