Wednesday, June 18, 2003 Posted: 10:05 AM EDT (1405
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Depression
doesn't discriminate -- even a Olympic
gold medalist can suffer from it. But
treatment for the illness is
available.
CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) --Treatment rates for major depression have improved
significantly over the last two decades, but more than half of patients
nationwide are getting inadequate therapy, a new study suggests.
The findings suggest that while the stigma of mental illness may be easing,
many doctors may not be aware of treatment advancements, and many patients may
be seeking unproven therapies, said Harvard Medical School researcher Ronald
Kessler, the study's lead author.
"That's the most disturbing thing of all," Kessler said. "After all these
years of trying to get them in ... we've screwed up."
The nationally representative study of 9,090 people aged 18 and up found that
about 57 percent of participants with recent major depression had received
treatment. That rate is nearly 40 percent higher than rates reported in the
early 1980s, the researchers said.
Treatment was considered adequate or adhering to accepted guidelines in only
21 percent of patients with recent depression.
The findings, published in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical
Association, are based on face-to-face psychiatric evaluations conducted from
February 2001 to December 2002.
Overall, 6.6 percent of patients had major depression sometime within the
previous year, which equals up to about 14 million U.S. adults.
The overall prevalence is slightly higher than rates reported a decade ago
but whether it represents a true increase or just better recognition of
depression is uncertain, Kessler said.
'Left with a lot of disability'
The National Institute of Mental Health estimates that depression afflicts
9.5 percent of adults in any given year, or about 19 million, but those figures
are based on old data that were less strict than the current survey's criteria,
Kessler said.
Depression was moderate to severe in 90 percent of study participants, while
the older data may have included mild cases that would not be diagnosed as
depression today, he said.
Depression was more common in women and adults aged 18-44 than in men and
adults over 60. Rates were similar nationwide.
The increases in people seeking treatment show recent campaigns by the
government and others to raise awareness about depression are paying off, said
co-author Kathleen Merikangas, a researcher at the National Institute of Mental
Health.
"The increase makes me optimistic but I do think there's room for
improvement," Merikangas said.
Dr. William McKinney, a Northwestern Memorial Hospital psychiatrist, said the
results mean "unfortunately a lot of people with this illness are going to their
doctors and being put on some anti-depressant maybe for an inadequate dose for
inadequate time.
"These people are left with a lot of disability," said McKinney, director of
a depression research and treatment center at Northwestern University's medical
school.
Research has shown that a combination of medication and psychotherapy is
best, but treatment needs to be tailored to the individual patient, Kessler
said.
Depression in the workplace
Another JAMA study estimates that depression costs U.S. employers $44 billion
yearly in absenteeism and lost productivity, $31 billion more per year than
related costs from nondepressed workers.
Those costs don't include labor costs associated with disability leave, said
lead researcher Walter Stewart, an epidemiologist with Geisinger Health Systems
in Danville, Pennsylvania.
Depression "is mostly invisible. Co-workers don't know about it, employers
aren't aware of it" and doctors don't always question patients with possible
symptoms about it, Stewart said.
The challenge is "trying to understand how to motivate both workers and
employers and health care providers how to better manage this condition," he
said.
The researchers conducted telephone interviews last year with a nationally
representative sample of U.S. workers aged 18 to 65.
Depressed workers reported an average of about 51/2 hours weekly of lost
productivity or absenteeism, compared with 11/2 hours weekly among nondepressed
workers. Stewart said the researchers assumed depression was a major factor in
those rates, but don't know for certain.
Copyright 2003 The
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
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