DO YOU HAVE THE BLUES?
Depression strikes about one in 15 Americans each year. According to Richard Brown,
M.D., author of Stop Depression Now (Peguin Putnam, 1995), it is the number one
complaint heard by primary care physicians. Clinical depression affects more than
19 million people alone each year in the United States. Furthermore, clinical
depression is the most common mental illness. United States sales of antidepressants
in 2003 were approximately $12 billion dollars. |
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However, only one third of patients
who were diagnosed with depression failed to respond to standard drugs, and
another third showed partial response.

The World Health Organization predicts that depression
will be the second most important cause of human disability by the year 2020.

Lancet.
1997 May 17;349(9063):1436-42.
Comment in:
Lancet.
1997 Jul 12;350(9071):144.
Global mortality, disability, and
the contribution of risk factors:Global Burden of Disease Study.
Murray
CJ, Lopez
AD.
Harvard School of Public Health,
Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
BACKGROUND: Prevention and control
of disease and injury require information about the leading medical
causes of illness and exposures or risk factors. The assessment of
the public-health importance of these has been hampered by the lack
of common methods to investigate the overall, worldwide burden. The
Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD) provides a standardised approach
to epidemiological assessment and uses a standard unit, the
disability-adjusted life year (DALY), to aid comparisons. METHODS:
DALYs for each age-sex group in each GBD region for 107 disorders
were calculated, based on the estimates of mortality by cause,
incidence, average age of onset, duration, and disability severity.
Estimates of the burden and prevalence of exposure in different
regions of disorders attributable to malnutrition, poor water supply,
sanitation and personal and domestic hygiene, unsafe sex, tobacco
use, alcohol, occupation, hypertension, physical inactivity, use of
illicit drugs, and air pollution were developed. FINDINGS: Developed
regions account for 11.6% of the worldwide burden from all causes of
death and disability, and account for 90.2% of health expenditure
worldwide. Communicable, maternal, perinatal, and nutritional
disorders explain 43.9%; non-communicable causes 40.9%; injuries
15.1%; malignant neoplasms 5.1%; neuropsychiatric conditions 10.5%;
and cardiovascular conditions 9.7% of DALYs worldwide. The ten
leading specific causes of global DALYs are, in descending order,
lower respiratory infections, diarrhoeal diseases, perinatal
disorders, unipolar major depression, ischaemic heart disease,
cerebrovascular disease, tuberculosis, measles, road-traffic
accidents, and congenital anomalies. 15.9% of DALYs worldwide are
attributable to childhood malnutrition and 6.8% to poor water, and
sanitation and personal and domestic hygiene. INTERPRETATION: The
three leading contributors to the burden of disease are communicable
and perinatal disorders affecting children. The substantial burdens
of neuropsychiatric disorders and injuries are under-recognised. The
epidemiological transition in terms of DALYs has progressed
substantially in China, Latin America and the Caribbean, other Asia
and islands, and the Middle Eastern crescent. If the burdens of
disability and death are taken into account, our list differs
substantially from other lists of the leading causes of death. DALYs
provide a common metric to aid meaningful comparison of the burden of
risk factors, diseases, and injuries.
PIP: The Global Burden
of Disease Study used the disability-adjusted life-year (DALY) to
compare death and disability from various disorders in developing and
developed countries. In 1990, developing countries carried almost 90%
of the global disease burden yet were recipients of only 10% of
global health care funding. The highest disease burdens were in
sub-Saharan Africa (21.4% of global total) and India (20.9%).
Communicable, maternal, perinatal, and nutritional disorders (group 1
causes) predominated in sub-Saharan Africa (65.9% of burden), while
noncommunicable diseases (group 2 causes) accounted for 80% of the
burden in established market economies; injuries (group 3) did not
differ substantially across regions. The ratio of group 2 to group 1
disorders can be used as a measure of the epidemiologic transition.
Group 2 disorders already surpass group 1 disorders in China, Latin
America, and the Caribbean. On a global level, group 1, 2, and 3
causes accounted for 43.9%, 40.9%, and 15.1%, respectively, of DALYs.
Overall, the top 3 causes of DALYs in 1990 were lower respiratory
infections, diarrheal diseases, and perinatal disorders (low birth
weight and birth asphyxia or birth trauma). In developed countries,
these causes were ischemic heart disease, unipolar major depression,
and cerebrovascular diseases. Malnutrition was the risk factor
responsible for the greatest loss of DALYs (15.9%), followed by poor
water supply, sanitation, and personal hygiene (6.8%).
PMID:
9164317 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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