4.7 Article

Investigating unrecognized needs and structural barriers to treatment of depressive symptoms: A nationwide cross-sectional study in Portugal

Journal

PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH
Volume 313, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2022.114623

Keywords

Depression; Gender; Mental health services; Portugal; Socioeconomic status

Categories

Funding

  1. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology - FCT [PD/BD/135591/2018]

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This study assessed the factors associated with perception of need and affordability concerns regarding mental health services among individuals with depressive symptoms in Portugal. It found that unrecognized need and affordability concerns were common among depressed individuals, but were unevenly distributed across social groups. Gender, age, education, and symptom severity were identified as important factors influencing these perceptions.
This study assesses factors associated with perception of need and affordability concerns regarding mental health services (MHS), among 978 persons with meaningful depressive symptoms (Patient Health Questionnaire=10). We used data from the 6th Portuguese National Health Interview Survey and used logistic regressions with gender, age, severity of symptoms, education, and income as explanatory variables. Health insurance was added as mediation variable. Unrecognized need (59.3% of the sample) was more likely amongst men, those over 65, high-educated, and those with moderate symptoms, compared to women, aged 18-34, low-educated, and those with severe symptoms. Among those reporting they needed MHS, 44.6% were not able to pay for them. Affordability concerns were more likely amongst men, those under 50, severely depressed, high-educated, and less likely amongst those within the highest income quintile. Adjusting for health insurance did not change the results in a meaningful way. Unrecognized need and affordability concerns are common among depressed perosons in Portugal but seem unevenly distributed across social groups. Investing in the capacity of primary healthcare services to treat depression may be crucial to promote perception of need and reduce structural barriers.

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