Prognostic significance of social network, social support and loneliness for course of major depressive disorder in adulthood and old age

AIMS: Poor recovery from depressive disorder has been shown to be related to low perceived social support and loneliness, but not to social network size or frequency of social interactions. Some studies suggest that the significance of social relationships for depression course may be greater in younger than in older patients, and may differ between men and women. None of the studies examined to what extent the different aspects of social relationships have unique or overlapping predictive values for depression course. It is the aim of the present study to examine the differential predictive v... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van den Brink, R H S
Schutter, N
Hanssen, D. J. C.
Elzinga, B. M.
Rabeling-Keus, I M
Stek, M L
Comijs, H C
Penninx, B W J H
Oude Voshaar, R C
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2018
Reihe/Periodikum: van den Brink , R H S , Schutter , N , Hanssen , D J C , Elzinga , B M , Rabeling-Keus , I M , Stek , M L , Comijs , H C , Penninx , B W J H & Oude Voshaar , R C 2018 , ' Prognostic significance of social network, social support and loneliness for course of major depressive disorder in adulthood and old age ' , Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences , vol. 27 , no. 3 , pp. 266-277 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S2045796017000014
Schlagwörter: NETHERLANDS / RELIABILITY / ANTIDEPRESSANT MEDICATION / GERIATRIC DEPRESSION / CLINICAL FACTORS / HEALTH / RECOVERY / SYMPTOMATOLOGY / METAANALYSIS / ASSOCIATION
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27209669
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/42abd7f5-cc62-4526-bf66-6560a67b207e

AIMS: Poor recovery from depressive disorder has been shown to be related to low perceived social support and loneliness, but not to social network size or frequency of social interactions. Some studies suggest that the significance of social relationships for depression course may be greater in younger than in older patients, and may differ between men and women. None of the studies examined to what extent the different aspects of social relationships have unique or overlapping predictive values for depression course. It is the aim of the present study to examine the differential predictive values of social network characteristics, social support and loneliness for the course of depressive disorder, and to test whether these predictive associations are modified by gender or age. METHODS: Two naturalistic cohort studies with the same design and overlapping instruments were combined to obtain a study sample of 1474 patients with a major depressive disorder, of whom 1181 (80.1%) could be studied over a 2-year period. Social relational variables were assessed at baseline. Two aspects of depression course were studied: remission at 2-year follow-up and change in depression severity over the follow-up period. By means of logistic regression and random coefficient analysis, the individual and combined predictive values of the different social relational variables for depression course were studied, controlling for potential confounders and checking for effect modification by age (below 60 v. 60 years or older) and gender. RESULTS: Multiple aspects of the social network, social support and loneliness were related to depression course, independent of potential confounders - including depression severity - but when combined, their predictive values were found to overlap to a large extent. Only the social network characteristic of living in a larger household, the social support characteristic of few negative experiences with the support from a partner or close friend, and limited feelings of loneliness proved to have ...