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Psychiatric Epidemiology: Vibrant Art and Penetrating Science
Elliot M Goldner
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The National Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being in Australia: Impact on Policy
Scott Henderson

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Child Psychiatric Epidemiology and Canadian Public Policy-Making: The State of the Science and the Art of the Possible
Charlotte Waddell, David R Offord, Cody A Shepherd, Josephine M Hua, Kimberley McEwan

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Prevalence and Incidence Studies of Schizophrenic Disorders: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Elliot M Goldner, Lorena Hsu, Paul Waraich, Julian M Somers

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Original Research
Sleep Quality in Chronic Pain Patients

Kemal Sayar, Meltem Arikan, Tulin Yontem

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Psychiatric Disorders and Use of Mental Health Services by Ontario Women
Sarah Frise, Allan Steingart, Margaret Sloan, Michelle Cotterchio, Nancy Kreiger

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Counsellors in Primary Care: Benefits and Lessons Learned
Nick Kates, Anne-Marie Crustolo, Sheryl Farrar, Lambrina Nikolaou

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Neuropsychological Performance in DSM-IV ADHD Subtypes: An Exploratory Study With Untreated Adolescents
Marcelo Schmitz, Luciana Cadore, Marcelo Paczko, Letícia Kipper, Márcia Chaves, Luis A Rohde, Clarissa Moura, Márcia Knijnik

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Benefits of Switching From Typical to Atypical Antipsychotic Medications: A Longitudinal Study in a Community-Based Setting

Peter E Cook, Joel O Goldberg, Ryan J Van Lieshout

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Homicide in the Canadian Prairies: Elderly and Nonelderly Killings
AG Ahmed, Robin PD Menzies

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Categorizing Continuous Variables

A Case of Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome With Clozapine and Risperidone

Zonisamide Treatment of Bipolar Disorder: A Case Report

Combined Use of Atypical Antipsychotics and Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy in Schizophrenia

Distress Levels in Patients With Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder

Alcoholism, Seasonal Depression, and Suicidal Behaviour

Recruiting Residents Through a Summer Medical Student Program

A Case of Paroxetine-Induced Galactorrhea

Beyond Principal-Component Analysis of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale in Patients With Schizophrenia

Olanzapine-Induced Hair Loss

Paternal Age as a Risk Factor

Original Research

Psychiatric Disorders and Use of Mental Health Services by Ontario Women

Sarah Frise, MSc1, Allan Steingart, MD2, Margaret Sloan, BA3, Michelle Cotterchio, MS, PhD4, Nancy Kreiger, MPH, PhD5

 

Objective: To describe the lifetime prevalence of selected psychiatric disorders in Ontario women and to compare these estimates with use of mental health resources.

Method: We obtained data from a survey of 3062 Ontario women, aged 25 to 74 years, who participated in the Women’s Health Study. A 5-item scale assessed lifetime prevalence of 5 psychiatric disorders (anxiety, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD], obsessive–compulsive disorder [OCD], and anorexia [AN] or bulimia [BN]). We assessed use of mental health services by comorbidity. We employed stratified random sampling to select study subjects. Prevalence estimates were weighted and 95%CIs were obtained using Taylor linearization techniques (1).

Results: Nearly 30% of those surveyed reported at least 1 of the disorders studied. The most common were depression (27%) and anxiety (21%). Lifetime prevalence of PTSD, OCD, and AN or BN were 10.7%, 6.1%, and 3.9%, respectively. Successively younger birth cohorts displayed an increase in prevalence and a decrease in onset-age for all disorders. “Ever” use of mental health services was higher for women with 3 or more comorbid disorders (65%) than for those with no disorder (9.8%), or only 1 disorder (51.4%).

Conclusions: The results of this study highlight the need to conduct more research into the reasons for the low rates of professional service use, especially for women with high comorbidity. They also highlight the need to understand the phenomenon underlying the possibly increasing rates of disorders in younger birth cohorts, so that outreach strategies can be modified to accommodate differences in younger women.

(Can J Psychiatry 2002;47: 849–856)

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Clinical Implications

  • Research into the underlying cause of higher rates of selected psychiatric disorders in younger birth cohorts is necessary.

  • Reasons for the barriers to seeking professional help for psychiatric disorders need to be further investigated in Canadian women.

Limitations

  • The mental health questionnaire employed was an unvalidated instrument.


Key Words
: psychiatric disorders, epidemiology, survey, Canada

Résumé : Les troubles psychiatriques et l’utilisation des services de santé mentale par les femmes de l’Ontario

Psychiatric illnesses such as depression and anxiety disorders are important health concerns. Owing to substantial morbidity and mortality, they impose a significant burden on the health care system (2,3). Traditionally, they were believed to be predominantly disorders of the middle-aged and elderly (4,5). However, several studies in Canada (6–9) and the US (10) demonstrate significantly higher rates of mental illness—most notably depression and anxiety—in adolescents and young adults than in the middle-aged and elderly. Further, across all age groups, many disorders are more prevalent in women than in men—particularly, mood, anxiety, and eating disorders (4,7,10).

The higher rates of depression and anxiety in younger people have been observed in studies measuring 1-year prevalence rates (7,8,11,12), as well as in studies measuring lifetime rates (4,9,10). This finding has led to the suggestion that, during this century, the prevalence of many mental disorders is increasing, and the onset-age is decreasing, with successive birth cohorts (4,5).

Previous studies in Canada and the US have also described the 12-month use of health services to treat mental illness, with the primary focus on affective disorders, anxiety disorders, and substance abuse disorders (2,13–15). Unmet need for health services in the US was further defined in a study relating lifetime prevalence of these illnesses to lifetime and 12-month use of health care resources (10). Data relating lifetime and 12-month illness prevalence to the use of health care resources have not previously included less common disorders such as obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and anorexia (AN) or bulimia (BN); previously reported rates may be underestimating the unmet need.

This paper describes data collected from Ontario women on the lifetime prevalence of depression, anxiety disorders, PTSD, OCD, and AN or BN. We examined the onset-age of these diseases for successive birth cohorts. Moreover, to further define the need for mental health services in the community, we relate the lifetime presence of these disorders to the lifetime use of mental health services.

Methods

Survey respondents were drawn from control subjects in the Women’s Health Study (WHS), a case–control study that employed a self-administered mailed questionnaire to examine the association between the use of various medications and breast cancer risk in Ontario women (16). All control subjects were identified using the Ontario Ministry of Finance 1996 population-based assessment rolls, which include both homeowners and tenants and list age, sex, and address. We randomly selected control subjects from these rolls to match the age distribution of the breast cancer cases, so that at least 1 age-matched control subject was selected for each case from 9 separate age strata. Of the 5001 women identified as eligible control subjects, 3062 participated, resulting in an overall response rate of 61%. Sampling weights based on the age distribution of women in Ontario were applied to each stratum.

Analyses were focused on the respondents’ self-report of ever experiencing 1 of 5 psychiatric disorders (anxiety disorders, PTSD, OCD, AN or BN, and depression) and their use of health services related to treating mental illness. The survey questions on mental illness were originally designed to collect information for the WHS on possible confounders of breast cancer and medication use. For efficiency, therefore, we included only 1 question to assess the lifetime presence or absence of each of the 5 mental disorders; we did not ask questions on substance abuse. All questions were worded as, “Have you ever suffered from (disorder)?” and followed by a description of the symptoms associated with each disorder to help the respondent (see Table 1). We developed questions based on the diagnostic categories covered in the DSM-IV (17), the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID) (18), and the National Institute of Mental Health Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS) (19). However, we did not employ the highly structured research interviews incorporating the explicit DSM diagnostic criteria, because the questionnaire was self-administered. We included questions on marital status and education; household income (low, medium, or high) was derived from categories of income and household size. For each respondent, we also collected the “ever” use of mental health services (that is, medication, counselling, electroconvulsive therapy, or hospitalization), along with age at first treatment and age of most recent treatment. These questions were worded, “Have you ever received help from a professional (for example, physician, counsellor, psychiatrist) for (disorder)?” The questionnaire was extensively pretested by colleagues and a convenience sample of women, but it was never formally validated.

Table 1  Survey questions on psychiatric disorders

Depression

Have you ever suffered from depression?  (Feeling depressed or lack of interest or pleasure in life every day or almost every day for at least 2 weeks, possibly accompanied by sleep disturbances, fatigue, changes in appetite, feeling of guilt and/or thoughts about death and suicide.)

q Yes  q No

Anxiety disorder

Have you ever suffered from anxiety? (Excessive fear or phobias about particular things, panic, or feeling that you are on the verge of losing control)

q Yes  q No

Traumatic stress

Have you ever suffered from traumatic stress? (Flashbacks, dreams or nightmares about a traumatic experience in your life)

q Yes  q No

Obsessive–compulsive disorder

Have you ever suffered from obsessions or compulsions? (Repetitive thought or actions that you can’t seem to control or put out of your mind)

q Yes  q No

Anorexia or bulimia

Have you ever suffered from anorexia nervosa or bulimia? (Excessive dieting or deliberate self-starvation or excessive over-eating or binging followed by vomiting, excessive use of laxatives, or excessive exercise)

q Yes  q No

Owing to stratified sampling methods and unequal probabilities of selection, we weighted all estimates and employed Taylor linearization methods for calculating 95%CIs and adjusted chi-square statistics (1). Six birth cohorts were defined for comparability with previous studies (4,5): earlier than 1925 (cohort 1), 1925 to 1934 (cohort 2), 1935 to 1944 (cohort 3), 1945 to 1954 (cohort 4), 1955 to 1964 (cohort 5), and 1965 or later (cohort 6). The time at risk for each disorder (the survival time) was either the age at which the subject first experienced the problem or, for those who did not report having the disorder, the subject’s age at the time the questionnaire was completed. We used the Kaplan-Meier product-limit estimate to determine the cumulative lifetime prevalence of each disorder for each birth cohort (20). All analyses were performed using Stata version 6.0 (21).


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