Impacts of heart disease, depression and their combination on all-cause mortality in older people: a rural community-based cohort study in China

Author:

Zhou WeijuORCID,Hopkins Alex,Zaman M Justin,Tao Xuguang (Grant),Rodney Amanda,Yao Yuyou,Cao Zhongqiang,Ma Ying,Hu Zhi,Copeland John J,Chen RuolingORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo assess the impact of heart disease (HD) combined with depression on all-cause mortality in older people living in the community.DesignA population-based cohort study.ParticipantsWe examined the data of 1429 participants aged ≥60 years recruited in rural areas in Anhui province, China. Using a standard method of interview, we documented all types of HD diagnosed by doctors and used the validated Geriatric Mental Status-Automated Geriatric Examination for Computer Assisted Taxonomy algorithm to diagnose any depression for each participant at baseline in 2003. The participants were followed up for 8 years to identify vital status.MeasurementsWe sought to examine all-cause mortality rates among participants with HD only, depression only and then their combination compared with those without these diseases using multivariate adjusted Cox regression models.Results385 deaths occurred in the cohort follow-up. Participants with baseline HD (n=91) had a significantly higher mortality (64.9 per 1000 person-years) than those without HD (42.9). In comparison to those without HD and depression, multivariate adjusted HRs for mortality in the groups of participants who had HD only, depression only and both HD and depression were 1.46 (95% CI 0.98 to 2.17), 1.79 (95% CI 1.28 to 2.48) and 2.59 (95% CI 1.12 to 5.98), respectively.ConclusionOlder people with both HD and depression in China had significantly increased all-cause mortality compared with those with HD or depression only, and without either condition. Psychological interventions should be taken into consideration for older people and those with HD living in the community to improve surviving outcome.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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