4.3 Article

Does the suddenness matter? Antidepressant use before and after a spouse dies suddenly or expectedly of stroke

Journal

SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages 75-81

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/14034948211042501

Keywords

Stroke; mental health; record linkage; depression; elderly

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This study aims to investigate the relationship between sudden spousal death from stroke and mental health changes in the surviving spouse. The results indicate that sudden spousal death from stroke has a significant impact on the mental health of the surviving spouse.
Aims: Changes in mental health at the time of widowhood may depend on the expectedness of spousal death, but scant evidence is available for spousal deaths attributable to stroke. Methods: Using register-linkage data for Finland, we assessed changes in antidepressant use before and after spousal death for those whose spouses died suddenly of stroke between 1998 and 2003 (N=1820) and for those whose spouses died expectedly of stroke, with prior hospitalisation for cerebrovascular disease (N=1636). We used both population-averaged logit models and individual fixed-effects linear probability models. The latter models control for unobserved time-invariant heterogeneity between the individuals. Results: Our study indicates that the suddenness of a spouse's death from stroke plays a role in the well-being of the surviving spouse. Increases in antidepressant use appeared larger following widowhood for those whose spouses died suddenly of stroke relative to those whose spouses had a medical history of cerebrovascular disease. Conclusions: The suddenness of a spouse's death from stroke plays a role for the surviving spouse. The results suggest multifaceted timings of distress surrounding spousal death, depending on the suddenness of a spouse's death from stroke.

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