Author:
Kennedy Noel,Abbott Rosemary,Paykel Eugene S.
Abstract
BackgroundFew follow-up studies of depression have evaluated depressive symptomatology over time at both threshold and sub-threshold levels.AimsTo evaluate long-term longitudinal symptomatic course after an episode of severe depression.MethodA total of 61 participants from a previous study cohort underwent a detailed interview covering the longitudinal course of depression and pharmacological treatment over 8–11 years of follow-up.ResultsOf the follow-up months, 52% were spent at an asymptomatic level, 15% at minor symptom level, 20% at residual symptom level and 13% at full depression level. Also, 30% of follow-up months were spent in an episode of depression, and 18% of patients never achieved asymptomatic status during follow-up. The percentage of patients at each symptom level remained relatively stable after the first 2 years, but levels in individuals fluctuated, with a mean of two changes in symptom levels per follow-up year.ConclusionsAfter severe episodes, sub-syndromal levels of depression are common and persistent, with considerable fluctuation suggesting a continuum between sub-syndromal subtypes and full depression.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
82 articles.
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