4.7 Article

Comorbid mental disorders, depression symptom severity, and role impairment among Veterans initiating depression treatment through the Veterans Health Administration

期刊

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
卷 290, 期 -, 页码 227-236

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.04.033

关键词

Comorbidity; Depression symptom severity; Depression; Functioning; Role impairment; Veterans; Veterans Health Administration

资金

  1. Office of Mental Health Services and Suicide Prevention
  2. Center of Excellence for Suicide Prevention
  3. National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health [R01MH121478]
  4. United States Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research & Development Service Career Development Award [IK2 HX002867]
  5. PCORI Project Program Award [ME-2019C1-16172]

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The study found that depression severity and comorbidities have independent and significant associations with role impairments in Veterans. The impact of depression severity on role impairments is greater than that of comorbidities.
Background: Psychiatric comorbidities may complicate depression treatment by being associated with increased role impairments. However, depression symptom severity might account for these associations. Understanding the independent associations of depression severity and comorbidity with impairments could help in treatment planning. This is especially true for depressed Veterans, who have high psychiatric comorbidity rates. Methods: 2,610 Veterans beginning major depression treatment at the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) were administered a baseline self-report survey that screened for diverse psychiatric comorbidities and assessed depression severity and role impairments. Logistic and generalized linear regression models estimated univariable and multivariable associations of depression severity and comorbidities with impairments. Population attributable risk proportions (PARPs) estimated the relative importance of depression severity and comorbidities in accounting for role impairments. Results: Nearly all patients (97.8%) screened positive for at least one comorbidity and half (49.8%) for 4+ comorbidities. The most common positive screens were for generalized anxiety disorder (80.2%), posttraumatic stress disorder (77.9%), and panic/phobia (77.4%). Depression severity and comorbidities were significantly and additively associated with impairments in multivariable models. Associations were attenuated much less for depression severity than for comorbidities in multivariable versus univariable models. PARPs indicated that 15-60% of role impairments were attributable to depression severity and 5-32% to comorbidities.

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