Business Standard

Depression tied to shorter lifespan

- LISA RAPAPORT REUTERS

People who suffer from depression may not live as long as individual­s who don’t experience this mental health disorder, a Canadian study suggests.

Researcher­s examined six decades of mental health and mortality data on 3,410 adults during three time periods: 1952 to 1967, 1968 to 1990 and 1991 to 2011. Depression was associated with an increased risk of premature death in every decade of the study for men, and starting in the 1990s for women.

The connection between depression and a shorter lifespan appeared strongest in the years following a depressive episode, leading the researcher­s to conclude that at least part of the risk might be reversed by effectivel­y treating the mental illness.

“For some individual­s depression can be very serious condition,” said lead study author Stephen Gilman of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Developmen­t.

“Given our finding that individual­s whose depression was present at multiple time points in our study were at highest risk, it is very important to seek treatment for depression and to be vigilant about recurrence­s,” Gilman said by email.

Depression has long been linked to a variety of health problems, in part because it may lead to physiologi­cal changes in the body and also because it can contribute to unhealthy habits like a poor diet, inactivity, smoking and excessive drinking. In the current study, however, researcher­s found a link between depression and premature death even after accounting for things like obesity, smoking and drinking habits.

“It is known that depression is associated with an increased risk of death from heart disease,” said Ralph Stewart, a researcher at the University of Auckland in New Zealand who wasn’t involved in the study.”

“This study suggests that this increased risk of death extends to other causes of premature death and persists over decades,” Stewart said by email. The researcher­s examined data from the Stirling County Study, which began in 1952 in Canada and is one of the first communityb­ased studies on mental illness. People were about 50 years old on average when they joined the study. Across the three time periods examined, researcher­s followed half of the participan­ts for at least 19 years. Researcher­s calculated life expectanci­es at age 25 for men and women with and without depression in each wave of the study. In the first wave, life expectancy with depression was 10 and 12 years shorter for women and men, respective­ly, researcher­s report in CMAJ.

Depression has long been linked to a variety of health problems, in part because it may lead to physiologi­cal changes in the body

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