Deakin University
Browse
austen-prevalenceofmental-2015.pdf (419.54 kB)

Prevalence of mental health disorders in inflammatory bowel disease: an Australian outpatient cohort

Download (419.54 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2015-07-15, 00:00 authored by D Tribbick, M Salzberg, M Ftanou, W R Connell, F Macrae, M A Kamm, G W Bates, G Cunningham, David AustinDavid Austin, S R Knowles
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to characterize prevalence of anxiety and depressive conditions and uptake of mental health services in an Australian inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) outpatient setting. METHODS: Eighty-one IBD patients (39 males, mean age 35 years) attending a tertiary hospital IBD outpatient clinic participated in this study. Disease severity was evaluated according to the Manitoba Index. Diagnosis of an anxiety or depressive condition was based upon the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. RESULTS: Based on Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale subscale scores >8 and meeting Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview criteria, 16 (19.8%) participants had at least one anxiety condition, while nine (11.1%) had a depressive disorder present. Active IBD status was associated with higher prevalence rates across all anxiety and depressive conditions. Generalized anxiety was the most common (12 participants, 14.8%) anxiety condition, and major depressive disorder (recurrent) was the most common depressive condition reported (five participants, 6.2%). Seventeen participants (21%) reported currently seeking help for mental health issues while 12.4% were identified has having at least one psychological condition but not seeking treatment. CONCLUSION: We conclude that rates of anxiety and depression are high in this cohort, and that IBD-focused psychological services should be a key component of any holistic IBD service, especially for those identified as having active IBD.

History

Journal

Clinical and experimental gastroenterology

Volume

8

Pagination

197 - 204

Publisher

Dove Medical Press

Location

Macclesfield, Eng.

ISSN

1178-7023

eISSN

1178-7023

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, The Authors