4.6 Article

Diet quality in persons with and without depressive and anxiety disorders

期刊

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH
卷 106, 期 -, 页码 1-7

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2018.09.006

关键词

Diet; Nutrition; Depression; Anxiety; Mediterranean diet; Alternative healthy eating index

资金

  1. Geestkracht program of the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMw) [10-000-1002]
  2. VU University Medical Center
  3. GGZ inGeest
  4. Leiden University Medical Center
  5. GGZ Rivierduinen
  6. University Medical Center Groningen
  7. Lentis
  8. GGZ Friesland
  9. GGZ Drenthe
  10. Rob Giel Onderzoekscentrum
  11. EU FP7 MooDFOOD Project 'Multi-country collaborative project on the rOle of Diet, FOod-related behaviour, and Obesity in the prevention of Depression' [613598]
  12. Amsterdam Public Health research institute
  13. Leiden University
  14. University of Groningen

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Objective: This study examines the association of depressive and anxiety disorders and their clinical characteristics (disorder type, severity, chronicity and clinical subtypes) with diet quality. Method: Data from 1634 adults (controls = 336, current disorder = 414, remitted = 886) were sourced from the 9-year follow-up of the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety. Depressive and anxiety disorders were established with Composite International Diagnostic Interviews. Severity was measured with the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (IDS), Fear Questionnaire and the Beck Anxiety Inventory. Chronicity was measured with life-chart interviews expressed as percentage time with a disorder(s). Diet quality was evaluated using the Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS) and the Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI). Results: Diet quality was significantly worse among subjects with a current disorder than among healthy controls. Subdividing subjects showed that those with concurrent depressive and anxiety disorders had the lowest diet quality score (MDS: beta = -0.41 per SD, 95% Confidence interval (95%CI) = -0.60, 0.21; AHEI beta = 0.22 per SD 95% CI = 0.42,-0.03). More chronic depression or anxiety disorders and increased severity in all participants showed a dose-response association with poorer diet quality. There was no distinct pattern between IDS items related to depression subtypes and diet quality. Conclusion: Diet quality is poorer in persons with depressive and anxiety disorders; in particular in those with comorbidity. The more severe and chronic the symptoms, the poorer the diet quality. Prospective studies are needed to confirm the direction of the relationship of depressive and anxiety disorders with diet quality and to examine whether improving diet quality could improve mental health.

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