Author/Authors :
Ville Lehtinen، نويسنده , , Britta Sohlman، نويسنده , , Teija Nummelin، نويسنده , , Marja Salomaa، نويسنده , , José-Luis Ayuso-Mateos .
Christopher Dowrick، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background In contrast to the huge number
of prevalence studies, there are relatively few incidence
studies of depressive disorders. Furthermore,
estimates of incidence vary remarkably between existing
studies. The aim of this paper is to add knowledge
about the incidence and determinants of depressive
disorder, based on the Finnish sub-sample of the
European Outcomes of Depression International Network
study. Method The random population sample in
the Finnish sub-study consisted of 2,999 subjects, aged
18–64, selected from one urban and one rural area. In
the baseline survey, potential cases of depressive disorder
were identified using the Beck Depression Inventory.
SCAN-2 interview was used to assign caseness
against ICD-10 criteria. Findings from the 1-year follow-
up survey with those who responded in the baseline
survey (N=1,939), using the same case-finding
instruments, were used to estimate the incidence rate
of depressive disorder. Results The estimated annual
incidence rate for all depressive disorders, including
both first-time and recurrent episodes, was 28.5 per
1,000; for first-time episodes it was 20.5 per 1,000.
Significant predictors for experiencing a depressive
episode were: suffering from self-perceived long-term
illness or handicap, experiencing little or no concern
from friends, low sense of coherence, low self-confidence,
uncertainty about one’s future and reporting
two or more threatening life events during the preceding
6 months. Conclusions About 3% of the working-
age population experience an episode of depressive
disorder each year. Due to recall problems, the estimate
of first-time incidence may be too high.