TY - JOUR
T1 - The epidemiology of psychiatrist-ascertained depression and DSM-III depressive disorders Results from the Eastern Baltimore Mental Health Survey Clinical Reappraisal
AU - Romanoski, A. J.
AU - Nestadt, G.
AU - Merchant, A.
AU - McHugh, P. R.
AU - Gruenberg, E. M.
AU - Brown, C. H.
AU - Chahal, R.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported in part by the Epidemiological Catchment Area (ECA) Program funded by Grant U01-MH-33780 from NIMH, Division of Biometry and Epidemiology, by the Psychiatric Epidemiology Training Program of the NIMH Center for Epidemiological Studies funded by Grant 2T32-MH-14592, by grants from the Milbank Memorial Fund and by the Johns Hopkins University Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
PY - 1992/8
Y1 - 1992/8
N2 - Psychiatrists used a semi-structured Standardized Psychiatric Examination method to examine 810 adults drawn from a probability sample of eastern Baltimore residents in 1981. Of the population, 5.9% was found to be significantly depressed. DSM-III major depression (MD) had a prevalence of 1.1 % and ‘non-major depression' (nMD), our collective term for the other depressive disorder categories in DSM-III, had a prevalence of 3.4%. The two types of depression differed by sex ratio, age-specific prevalence, symptom severity, symptom profiles, and family history of suicide. Analyses using a multiple logistic regression model discerned that both types of depression were influenced by adverse life events, and that nMD was influenced strongly by gender, marital status, and lack of employment outside the home. Neither type of depression was influenced by income, education, or race. This study validates the concept of major depression as a clinical entity. Future studies of the aetiology, mechanism, and treatment of depression should distinguish between these two types of depression.
AB - Psychiatrists used a semi-structured Standardized Psychiatric Examination method to examine 810 adults drawn from a probability sample of eastern Baltimore residents in 1981. Of the population, 5.9% was found to be significantly depressed. DSM-III major depression (MD) had a prevalence of 1.1 % and ‘non-major depression' (nMD), our collective term for the other depressive disorder categories in DSM-III, had a prevalence of 3.4%. The two types of depression differed by sex ratio, age-specific prevalence, symptom severity, symptom profiles, and family history of suicide. Analyses using a multiple logistic regression model discerned that both types of depression were influenced by adverse life events, and that nMD was influenced strongly by gender, marital status, and lack of employment outside the home. Neither type of depression was influenced by income, education, or race. This study validates the concept of major depression as a clinical entity. Future studies of the aetiology, mechanism, and treatment of depression should distinguish between these two types of depression.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0033291700038095
DO - 10.1017/S0033291700038095
M3 - Article
C2 - 1410089
AN - SCOPUS:0026733584
SN - 0033-2917
VL - 22
SP - 629
EP - 655
JO - Psychological Medicine
JF - Psychological Medicine
IS - 3
ER -