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What happens to depressed men? Application of the Stirling County criteria.

Authors :
Weissman MM
Greenwald S
Wickramaratne P
Bland RC
Newman SC
Canino GJ
Rubio-Stipec M
Lépine JP
Lellouch J
Hwu HG
Yeh EK
Lee CK
Joyce PR
Wells JE
Source :
Harvard review of psychiatry [Harv Rev Psychiatry] 1997 May-Jun; Vol. 5 (1), pp. 1-6.
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

In a recent issue of the Harvard Review of Psychiatry, results from the Stirling County Study showed that the prevalence and incidence rates of depression were similar in men and women when "gender-fair" criteria were used and help-seeking was not required. We attempted to replicate these findings by applying the criteria for depression from the Stirling County Study to two national and six international epidemiologic surveys conducted in the 1980s and 1990s. Depression was defined as dysphoric mood and disturbances of sleep, appetite, and energy, with at least a mild degree of impairment. The rates of depression were computed using this algorithm with data from the US Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study, conducted in the 1980s, the US National Comorbidity Survey, conducted in the 1990s, and independent community surveys from Canada, Puerto Rico, France, Taiwan, Korea, and New Zealand. For the US studies, these rates were recalculated after persons seeking treatment were removed from the analyses, where such data were available. Using Stirling County Study criteria, the lifetime prevalence rate of depression remains approximately twice as high in women as in men cross-nationally, except in Puerto Rico. Excluding help-seeking as a criterion and controlling for birth cohort do not change the findings. The Stirling County findings on absence of a sex difference in rates of depression using "gender-fair" criteria may be due to methodological variance in the collection of data, sample size, or the social and/or genetic uniqueness of the Atlantic Canadian community.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1067-3229
Volume :
5
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Harvard review of psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9385014
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3109/10673229709034719