Comorbidity of Anxiety and Depression with Hypertension, Diabetes, and Cardiovascular Disease: A Selective Systematic Review from India

Author:

Rajan Sukanya1,Krishna Archith1,Muliyala Krishna Prasad1,Chaturvedi Santosh Kumar2

Affiliation:

1. IMPACT Project, Department of Psychiatry, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bangalore, India

2. Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust, Leicester, UK

Abstract

Context: Non-communicable diseases (cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, and diabetes) and comorbid common mental disorders are of public health concern because of their high morbidity and mortality rates. The authors undertook a systematic review of studies that reported the prevalence of common mental disorders among non-communicable diseases, specifically in India. Evidence acquisition: Relevant databases (Medline, Google Scholar, EBSCO, and ProQuest) were searched until May 2021. Descriptive and observation studies from the mentioned databases were included. Evidence synthesis: Of the total 6,515 studies, the electronic literature search identified 4,307 studies. Manual cross-referencing identified an additional 2,208 studies. Only 17 studies met the criteria and were included for the review. Findings: Twelves studies focused on the prevalence of anxiety and depression in patients with diabetes, three studies focused on cardiovascular disease, two on non-communicable diseases, and one on the prevalence of depression in hypertension. The range of the prevalence of anxiety disorder and depression was 3.9–44% and 8–44%, respectively. Conclusion: High prevalence of anxiety and depression is seen in people with diabetes, indicating these are of serious public health concerns in India.

Publisher

European Medical Group

Subject

General Medicine

Reference60 articles.

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