Depressive disorders in Europe: prevalence figures from the ODIN study

José Luís Ayuso‐Mateos(Universidad de Cantabria), José Luis Vázquez‐Barquero(Universidad de Cantabria), Christopher Dowrick(University of Liverpool), Ville Lehtinen, Odd Steffen Dalgard, Patricia Casey(University College Dublin), Clare Wilkinson(University of Wales), Lourdes Lasa, Page Hl(University of Liverpool), Graham Dunn(University of Manchester), Greg Wilkinson(University of Liverpool), the Odin Group
The British Journal of Psychiatry
October 1, 2001
Cited by 564

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This is the first report on the epidemiology of depressive disorders from the European Outcome of Depression International Network (ODIN) study. AIMS: To assess the prevalence of depressive disorders in randomly selected samples of the general population in five European countries. METHOD: The study was designed as a cross-sectional two-phase community study using the Beck Depression inventory during Phase 1, and the Schedule for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry during Phase 2. RESULTS: An analysis of the combined sample (n=8.764) gave an overall prevalence of depressive disorders of 8.56% (95% CI 7.05-10.37). The figures were 10.05% (95% CI 7.80-12.85) for women and 6.61% (95% CI 4.92-8.83) for men. The centres fall into three categories: high prevalence (urban Ireland and urban UK), low prevalence (urban Spain) and medium prevalence (the remaining sites). CONCLUSIONS: Depressive disorder is a highly prevalent condition in Europe. The major finding is the wide difference in the prevalence of depressive disorders found across the study sites.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis