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The Risk of Chronic Diseases in Individuals Responding to a Measure for the Initial Screening of Depression and Reported Feelings of Being Down, Depressed, or Hopeless
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

The Risk of Chronic Diseases in Individuals Responding to a Measure for the Initial Screening of Depression and Reported Feelings of Being Down, Depressed, or Hopeless

Mohammed Khatib, Nathan Badillo, Payal Kahar and Deepesh Khanna
Curēus (Palo Alto, CA), Vol.13(9), pp.e17634-e17634
09-01-2021
PMID: 34646682

Abstract

chronic disease depression preventive medicine mental health behavioral health patient health questionnaire-2 hypertension dyslipidemia asthma diabetes

Introduction

Feeling down, depressed, or hopeless may provide a comprehensive measure for physicians to utilize, allowing a possible way to assess risk for chronic diseases.

Methods

A face-to-face, in-home, validated survey was conducted on participants aged 16 and older. Trained interviewers administered the questionnaire through the Computer-Assisted Personal Interview (CAPI) system. Through this measure, responses such as feelings of depression, diagnosis of high cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes, asthma, being overweight, coronary heart disease, and cancer or malignancy were recorded. Statistical analysis was conducted by descriptive analysis, Chi-Square test, and multinomial regression analysis. Results: Data are presented as a mean +/- SD and percentage. A total of 10560 individuals participated in the survey. Of participants reporting feeling down, depressed, or hopeless almost every day, 54.3% reported high blood pressure (chi 2=116.108, p= 0.000), 44.1% with high cholesterol level (chi 2=54.89, p= 0.000), 22.9% with diabetes (chi(2)=91.09, p= 0.000), 25.0% with asthma (chi(2)=93.83, p= 0.000), 49.5% had a doctor tell them they were overweight (chi 2=59.32, p= 0.000), 8.2% had coronary heart disease (chi 2=32.39, p= 0.000), and 11.4% that had cancer or malignancy (chi 2=7.73, p= 0.655). This is compared to individuals who reported no feelings of depression, with 34.2% having high blood pressure, 32.2% with high cholesterol, 12.9% with diabetes, 14.1% told they had asthma, 14.1% told they were overweight, 3.9% with coronary heart disease, and 9.4% who had cancer or malignancy.

Conclusion

The assessment of feeling down, depressed, or hopeless is significantly associated with the risk of certain chronic diseases, with those who reported feelings of depression nearly every day at the highest risk.

url
https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.17634View
Published (Version of record) Open

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being
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