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The effect of age on the relationship between negative life events and current and new depressive episodes: results from the Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Adult Health (ELSA-Brasil).

Authors :
Silva, Simone V.
Santos, Itamar S.
Lima, Danielle B.
Goulart, Alessandra C.
Varella, Ana C.
Lotufo, Paulo A.
Brunoni, Andre R.
Bensenor, Isabela M.
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders. Dec2024, Vol. 367, p507-518. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

There is scarce data concerning the relationship between negative life events (NLEs)* and current and new depressive episodes by age. Cross-sectional (baseline) and prospective analyses (4-year/8-year follow-ups) were performed in 15,105 civil servants in 6 cities in Brazil classified according to age strata at baseline: 1st(35–44), 2nd(45–54), 3rd(55–64), and 4th(65–74) years. The independent variable was NLEs in the last year (robbery, hospitalization, death of a relative, financial hardship, and rupture of a love relationship) collected at baseline. The dependent variable was depressive episodes assessed at baseline (current), and 4-year/8-year follow-ups (new). We built logistic (Odds Ratio[OR];95 % Confidence Interval[CI]) in the cross-sectional analysis and Poisson regression models (Relative Risk[RR], [CI]) in the prospective analysis. Robbery, hospitalization, financial hardship, rupture of a relationship were associated with current depressive episodes concentrated in the 35–44 age range, while for new depressive episodes, the association of hospitalization, death of a relative, and financial hardship were concentrated in the 45–54 age stratum. Financial hardship was associated with current depressive episodes in all age-strata: 1st: OR, 2.77(CI, 1.83–4.19); 2nd: OR, 1.71(CI, 1.26–2.34); 3rd: OR, 1.68(CI,1.15–2.46); 4th, OR, 4.07(CI, 1.24–13.34), and new depressive episodes: 1st: RR, 1.45(CI, 1.09–1.93); 2nd RR, 1.46(CI: 1.15–1.84); 3rd: RR, 1.97(CI, 1.38–2.82). Rupture of a relationship was associated only with current depressive episode, while death of a relative only with new depressive episode. We cannot rule out the possibility of recall bias, since NLEs' information was self-reported. The association between NLEs with depressive episodes was concentrated in youngers. • The association between negative life events with prevalent and incident depression was concentrated in the youngers. • The association of negative life events with prevalent and incident depression decreases with ageing. • Financial hardship was the negative life event most associated do prevalent and incident depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
367
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180295679
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2024.08.201