Author:
Thornicroft Graham,Chatterji Somnath,Evans-Lacko Sara,Gruber Michael,Sampson Nancy,Aguilar-Gaxiola Sergio,Al-Hamzawi Ali,Alonso Jordi,Andrade Laura,Borges Guilherme,Bruffaerts Ronny,Bunting Brendan,de Almeida Jose Miguel Caldas,Florescu Silvia,de Girolamo Giovanni,Gureje Oye,Haro Josep Maria,He Yanling,Hinkov Hristo,Karam Elie,Kawakami Norito,Lee Sing,Navarro-Mateu Fernando,Piazza Marina,Posada-Villa Jose,de Galvis Yolanda Torres,Kessler Ronald C.
Abstract
BackgroundMajor depressive disorder (MDD) is a leading cause of disability worldwide.AimsTo examine the: (a) 12-month prevalence of DSM-IV MDD; (b) proportion aware that they have a problem needing treatment and who want care; (c) proportion of the latter receiving treatment; and (d) proportion of such treatment meeting minimal standards.MethodRepresentative community household surveys from 21 countries as part of the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys.ResultsOf 51 547 respondents, 4.6% met 12-month criteria for DSM-IV MDD and of these 56.7% reported needing treatment. Among those who recognised their need for treatment, most (71.1%) made at least one visit to a service provider. Among those who received treatment, only 41.0% received treatment that met minimal standards. This resulted in only 16.5% of all individuals with 12-month MDD receiving minimally adequate treatment.ConclusionsOnly a minority of participants with MDD received minimally adequate treatment: 1 in 5 people in high-income and 1 in 27 in low-/lower-middle-income countries. Scaling up care for MDD requires fundamental transformations in community education and outreach, supply of treatment and quality of services.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
725 articles.
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