Gender differences in the association between cardiovascular diseases and major depressive disorder among older adults in India

T. Muhammad , Manacy Pai , Salmaan Ansari
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background

Despite the global disease burden associated with the co-occurrence of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) and depression, depression remains underdiagnosed and undertreated in the CVD population, especially among older adults in India. As such, this study examines (1) the association between single and multiple CVDs and major depressive disorder among older Indians; (2) whether this association is mediated by older adults' self-rated health and functional limitations; and (3) whether these associations vary for older men and women.

Methods

Data come from the 2017–18 wave 1 of the Longitudinal Ageing Study in India. Multivariable logistic regression is used to explore the association between CVDs and major depressive disorder among older men and women. The Karlson–Holm–Breen (KHB) method is used to examine the mediation effects of self-rated health and functional difficulties in the observed associations.

Results

Overall, 5.08% of the older adults had multiple CVDs. Older women (9.71%) had a higher prevalence of major depressive disorder compared to men (7.50%). Multiple CVDs were associated with greater odds of major depressive disorder after adjusting the potential covariates (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]: 1.49; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.10–2.00). Older men with multiple CVDs had a greater risk of major depressive disorder (AOR: 1.64; 95% CI: 1.05–2.57) relative to women with CVDs (AOR: 1.39; 95% CI: 0.93–2.08). The association between multiple CVDs and depression was mediated by self-rated health (34.03% for men vs. 34.55% for women), ADL difficulty (22.25% vs. 15.42%), and IADL difficulty (22.90% vs. 19.10%).

Conclusions

One in five older Indians with multiple CVDs reports major depressive disorder, which is three times more common than the prevalence of depressive disorder in older adults without CVDs. This association is attenuated by self-rated health and functional limitations. Moreover, these associations are more pronounced in older men relative to older women. These findings depart from prior inferences that men with CVDs are less psychologically distressed than their female counterparts. Moreover, the findings underscore the importance of gender-specific approaches to interventions and therapeutics for CVD-related mental health.

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印度老年人心血管疾病与重度抑郁症之间关系的性别差异
尽管全球疾病负担与心血管疾病(CVD)和抑郁症的共同发生有关,但在心血管疾病人群中,尤其是在印度的老年人中,抑郁症仍未得到充分诊断和治疗。因此,本研究检验了(1)印度老年人单一和多重心血管疾病与重度抑郁症之间的关系;(2)老年人自评健康和功能限制是否介导了这种关联;(3)这些关联是否在老年男性和女性中有所不同。方法数据来自印度纵向老龄化研究的2017-18波1。采用多变量logistic回归探讨老年男性和女性心血管疾病与重度抑郁症之间的关系。使用Karlson-Holm-Breen (KHB)方法来检验自评健康和功能困难在观察到的关联中的中介作用。结果总体而言,5.08%的老年人患有多重心血管疾病。老年女性(9.71%)的重度抑郁症患病率高于男性(7.50%)。在调整潜在协变量后,多重心血管疾病与重性抑郁障碍的几率较大相关(调整优势比[AOR]: 1.49;95%置信区间[CI]: 1.10-2.00)。患有多种心血管疾病的老年男性患重度抑郁症的风险更高(AOR: 1.64;95% CI: 1.05-2.57)相对于患有心血管疾病的女性(AOR: 1.39;95% ci: 0.93-2.08)。多重心血管疾病与抑郁之间的关联由自评健康(男性为34.03%,女性为34.55%)、ADL困难(22.25%,女性为15.42%)和IADL困难(22.90%,女性为19.10%)介导。结论:五分之一患有多种心血管疾病的印度老年人报告有重度抑郁症,这是无心血管疾病老年人抑郁症患病率的三倍。这种联系因自我评价的健康和功能限制而减弱。此外,与老年女性相比,这些关联在老年男性中更为明显。这些发现不同于先前的推断,即患有心血管疾病的男性比女性更少受到心理困扰。此外,研究结果强调了针对与心血管疾病相关的精神健康采取针对性别的干预和治疗方法的重要性。
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来源期刊
Dialogues in health
Dialogues in health Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
134 days
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