Social relationship correlates of major depressive disorder and depressive symptoms in Switzerland: nationally representative cross sectional study

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_7AD19282BCFC
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Social relationship correlates of major depressive disorder and depressive symptoms in Switzerland: nationally representative cross sectional study
Journal
BMC Public Health
Author(s)
Barger S. D., Messerli-Burgy N., Barth J.
ISSN
1471-2458 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1471-2458
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2014
Volume
14
Pages
273
Language
english
Notes
Barger, Steven D
Messerli-Burgy, Nadine
Barth, Jurgen
eng
England
BMC Public Health. 2014 Mar 24;14:273. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-273.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The quality and quantity of social relationships are associated with depression but there is less evidence regarding which aspects of social relationships are most predictive. We evaluated the relative magnitude and independence of the association of four social relationship domains with major depressive disorder and depressive symptoms. METHODS: We analyzed a cross-sectional telephone interview and postal survey of a probability sample of adults living in Switzerland (N=12,286). Twelve-month major depressive disorder was assessed via structured interview over the telephone using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). The postal survey assessed depressive symptoms as well as variables representing emotional support, tangible support, social integration, and loneliness. RESULTS: Each individual social relationship domain was associated with both outcome measures, but in multivariate models being lonely and perceiving unmet emotional support had the largest and most consistent associations across depression outcomes (incidence rate ratios ranging from 1.55-9.97 for loneliness and from 1.23-1.40 for unmet support, p's<0.05). All social relationship domains except marital status were independently associated with depressive symptoms whereas only loneliness and unmet support were associated with depressive disorder. CONCLUSIONS: Perceived quality and frequency of social relationships are associated with clinical depression and depressive symptoms across a wide adult age spectrum. This study extends prior work linking loneliness to depression by showing that a broad range of social relationship domains are associated with psychological well-being.
Keywords
Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression/*etiology, Depressive Disorder/etiology, Depressive Disorder, Major/*etiology, Female, Humans, *Interpersonal Relations, *Loneliness, Male, Middle Aged, *Social Support, Switzerland
Pubmed
Create date
08/11/2021 19:13
Last modification date
10/02/2023 20:41
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