
Research view
Title: | Epidemiological study of depressive disorders among patients attending outpatient clinics of Assiut University Hospitals |
Author: | Wageeh A. N. Hassan, Ahmed M. M. Hany, Alaa M. Darwish,Khaled A. Mohammed, Hosam E. Khalifa and Ahmed A. Abdel-Rahman |
Abstract: |
Background
Depression is a common mental health problem, seen frequently in general medical
settings. Primary care physicians are more likely to see patients with depression than
with any other disorder, except hypertension.
Aim
To estimate the percentage of depressive disorder among patients attending
outpatient clinics of Assiut University Hospitals.
Methods
A cross-sectional study was carried out during a 1-year period from 1 June 2006 to
31 May 2007; 2304 individuals 15 years of age and older were screened for
depression using the Beck Depression Inventory. Patients who scored 4 or more were
further evaluated using a psychiatric sheet especially prepared for the present work.
The psychiatric diagnosis of patients was made on the basis of the DSM-IV-TR criteria.
Results
Depression was found in 202 patients, representing 8.8% of the entire sample, with
167 patients (82.7%) classified as having major depressive disorder, 28 patients
(13.9%) with depressive disorder NOS, 26 patients (12.9%) with minor depression,
two patients (1%) with postpartum depression, five patients (2.5%) with dysthymic
disorder, and finally two patients with bipolar disorder, depressive episode. Depression
was found to be significantly higher among female patients, highly educated, literate
individuals, nonworking men, and among divorced/widowed/separated individuals.
Depressive disorders were also significantly higher among patients with certain
medical conditions (e.g. malignancy, disfiguring conditions, autoimmune conditions,
renal diseases, and hepatic diseases).
Conclusion
Depression is a common mental health problem, seen frequently in general medical
settings, and necessitates close psychiatric attention and management.
Keywords:
depression, medical disorders, prevalence
|
Journal: | Egyptian Journal of Psychiatry 2013, 34:42–50 |
Text: | |
Download Link |