Depression in Europe
Open Access
- 1 April 1999
- journal article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 174 (4) , 312-321
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.174.4.312
Abstract
Background: This is the first report of results from the EURODEP Programme.Aims: To assess the prevalence of depression judged suitable for intervention in randomised samples of those aged ⩾65 in nine European centres.Method: The GMS-AGECAT package.Results: Differences in prevalence are apparent, 8.8% (Iceland) to 23.6% (Munich). When sub-cases and cases are added together, five high- and four low-scoring centres emerge. Women predominated over men. Proportions of sub-cases to cases revealed striking differences but did not explain prevalence. There was no constant association between prevalence and age. A meta-analysis (n=13 808) gave an overall prevalence of 12. 3%, 14.1% for women and 8.6% for men.Conclusions: Considerable variation occurs in the levels of depression across Europe, the cause for which is not immediately obvious. Case and sub-case levels taken together show greater variability, suggesting that it is not a matter of case/sub-case selection criteria, which were standardised by computer. Substantial levels of depression are shown but 62–82% of persons had no depressive level. Opportunities for treatment exist.Keywords
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