1. Generalized anxiety disorder in urban China: Prevalence, awareness, and disease burden.
- Author
-
Yu, Wei, Singh, Shikha Satendra, Calhoun, Shawna, Zhang, Hui, Zhao, Xiahong, and Yang, Fengchi
- Subjects
- *
GENERALIZED anxiety disorder , *QUALITY of life , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *ANALYSIS of variance , *REGRESSION analysis , *COGNITION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DATABASES , *ECONOMIC aspects of diseases , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *SURVEYS , *CITY dwellers , *EVALUATION research , *ANXIETY disorders , *DISEASE prevalence , *CROSS-sectional method , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Introduction: Limited published research has quantified the Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) prevalence and its burden in China. This study aimed to fill in the knowledge gap and to evaluate the burden of GAD among adults in urban China.Methods: This study utilized existing data from the China National Health and Wellness Survey (NHWS) 2012-2013. Prevalence of self-reported diagnosed and undiagnosed GAD was estimated. Diagnosed and undiagnosed GAD respondents were compared with non-anxious respondents in terms of health-related quality of life (HRQoL), resource utilization, and work productivity and activity impairment using multivariate generalized linear models. A multivariate logistic model assessed the risk factors for GAD.Results: The prevalence of undiagnosed/diagnosed GAD was 5.3% in urban China with only 0.5% of GAD respondents reporting a diagnosis. Compared with non-anxious respondents, both diagnosed and undiagnosed GAD respondents had significantly lower HRQoL, more work productivity and activity impairment, and greater healthcare resource utilization in the past six months. Age, gender, marital status, income level, insurance status, smoking, drinking and exercise behaviors, and comorbidity burdens were significantly associated with GAD.Limitations: This was a patient-reported study; data are therefore subject to recall bias. The survey was limited to respondents in urban China; therefore, these results focused on urban China and may be under- or over-estimating GAD prevalence in China. Causal inferences cannot be made given the cross-sectional nature of the study.Conclusions: GAD may be substantially under-diagnosed in urban China. More healthcare resources should be invested to alleviate the burden of GAD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF