BMC Psychiatry | |
Patterns of risk for anxiety-depression amongst Vietnamese-immigrants: a comparison with source and host populations | |
Zachary Steel1  Nguyen Mong Giao3  Thuy Thi Bich Phan1  Derrick Silove1  Tien Chey1  Belinda J Liddell2  | |
[1] Centre for Population Mental Health Research, Level 1, Mental Health Centre, Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, Australia;School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia;Department of Psychiatry, Cần Thơ University, Cần Thơ, Vietnam | |
关键词: Vietnam; Culture; Trauma; Age; High income countries (HIC); Low-middle income countries (LMIC); Immigrant; Risk factor; Depression; Anxiety; | |
Others : 1123867 DOI : 10.1186/1471-244X-13-329 |
|
received in 2012-11-15, accepted in 2013-11-19, 发布年份 2013 | |
【 摘 要 】
Background
Studies suggest that immigrants have higher rates of anxiety-depression than compatriots in low-middle income countries and lower rates than populations in host high income countries. Elucidating the factors that underlie these stepwise variations in prevalence may throw new light on the pathogenesis of anxiety-depressive disorders globally. This study aimed to examine whether quantitative differences in exposure to, or the interaction between, risk factors account for these anxiety-depression prevalence differences amongst immigrant relative to source and host country populations.
Methods
Multistage population mental health surveys were conducted in three groups: 1) a Vietnamese-immigrant sample settled in Australia (n = 1161); 2) a Vietnamese source country sample residing in the Mekong Delta region (n = 3039); 3) an Australian-born host country sample (n = 7964). Multivariable logistic regression analyses compared risk factors between the Vietnamese-immigrant group and: 1) the Mekong Delta Vietnamese; and 2) the Australian-born group. Twelve month anxiety-depression diagnoses were the main outcome measures, derived from the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI), supplemented by an indigenously derived measure - the Phan Vietnamese Psychiatric Scale (PVPS) in both Vietnamese groups.
Results
The 12-month prevalence of anxiety-depression showed a stepwise increase across groups: Mekong Delta Vietnamese 4.8%; Vietnamese-immigrants 7.0%; Australian-born 10.2%. The two Vietnamese populations showed a similar risk profile with older age, exposure to potentially traumatic events (PTEs), multiple physical illnesses and substance use disorder (SUD) being associated with anxiety-depression, with the older Vietnamese-immigrants reporting greater exposure to these factors. The interaction between key risk factors differed fundamentally when comparing Vietnamese-immigrant and Australian-born samples. Age emerged as the major discriminator, with young Vietnamese-immigrants exhibiting particularly low rates of anxiety-depression.
Conclusions
The findings reported here suggest that core risk factors for anxiety-depression may be universal, but their patterning and interaction may differ according to country-of-origin. The study also highlights the importance of including both standard international and culturally-specific measures to index cross-cultural manifestations of common mental disorders.
【 授权许可】
2013 Liddell et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
20150216045723402.pdf | 359KB | download | |
Figure 1. | 48KB | Image | download |
【 图 表 】
Figure 1.
【 参考文献 】
- [1]WHO International Consortium in Psychiatric Epidemiology: Cross-national comparisons of the prevalences and correlates of mental disorders. Bull World Health Organ 2000, 78:413-426.
- [2]Kessler R, Aguilar-Gaxiola S, Alonso J, Chatterji S, Lee S, Ormel J, Ustun TB, Wang PS: The global burden of mental disorders: an update from the WHO World Mental Health (WMH) surveys. Epidemiol Psichiatr Soc 2009, 18:23-33.
- [3]The WHO World Mental Health Survey Consortium: Prevalence, severity, and unmet need for treatment of mental disorders in the world health organization world mental health surveys. JAMA 2004, 291:2581-2590.
- [4]Shrout PE, Canino GJ, Bird HR, Rubio-Stipec M, Bravo M, Burnam MA: Mental health status among Puerto Ricans, Mexican Amercians and non-hispanic whites. Am J Community Psychol 1992, 20:729-752.
- [5]Vega WA, Kolody B, Agilar-Gaxiola S, Alderete E, Catalano R, Caraveo-Anduaga J: Lifetime prevalence of DSM-III-R psychiatric disorders among Urban and Rural Mexican Americans in California. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1998, 55:771-778.
- [6]Breslau J, Aguilar-Gaxiola S, Borges G, Kendler KS, Su M, Kessler RC: Risk for psychiatric disorder among immigrants and their US-born descendants: evidence from the national comorbidity survey replication. J Nerv Ment Dis 2007, 195:189-195.
- [7]Steel Z, Silove D, Gaio NM, Thi Bich Pahn T, Chey T, Whelen A, Bauman A, Bryant RA: International and indigenous diagnoses of mental disorder among Vietnamese living in Vietnam and Australia. Br J Psychiatry 2009, 194:326-333.
- [8]Kessler RC: Epidemiology of women and depression. J Affect Disord 2003, 74:5-13.
- [9]Uutela A: Economic crisis and mental health. Curr Opin Psychiatry 2010, 23:127-130.
- [10]Borges G, Nock MK, Haro Abad JM, Hwang I, Sampson NA, Alonso J, Andrade LH, Angermeyer MC, Beautrais A, Bromet E, et al.: Twelve-month prevalence of and risk factors for suicide attempts in the world health organization world mental health surveys. J Clin Psychiatry 2010, 71:1617-1628.
- [11]Jorm AF: Does old age reduce the risk of anxiety and depression? A review of epidemiological studies across the adult life span. Psychol Med 2000, 30:11-20.
- [12]Otsuki TA: Substance use, self-esteem, and depression among Asian American adolescents. J Drug Educ 2003, 33:369-390.
- [13]Breslau J, Borges G, Hagar Y, Tancredi D, Gilman S: Immigration to the USA and risk for mood and anxiety disorders: variation by origin and age at immigration. Psychol Med 2009, 39:1117-1127.
- [14]Evans DL, Charney DS, Lewis L, Golden RN, Gorman JM, Krishnan KR, Nemeroff CB, Bremner JD, Carney RM, Coyne JC, et al.: Mood disorders in the medically ill: scientific review and recommendations. Biol Psychiatry 2005, 58:175-189.
- [15]Steel Z, Chey T, Silove D, Marnane C, Bryant RA, von Ommeren M: Association of Torture and Other Potentially Traumatic Events With Mental Health Outcomes Among Populations Exposed to Mass Conflict and Displacement: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA 2009, 302:537-549.
- [16]Mollica RF, McInnes K, Pool C, Tor S: Dose-effect relationships of trauma to symptoms of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder among Cambodian survivors of mass violence. Br J Psychiatry 1998, 173:482-488.
- [17]Patel V, Kleinman A: Poverty and common mental disorders in developing countries. Bull World Health Organ 2003, 81:609-615.
- [18]Lewis-Fernandez R, Hinton DE, Laria AJ, Patterson EH, Hoffman SG, Craske MG, Stein DJ, Asnaani A, Liao B: Culture and Anxiety Disorders: Recommendations for DSM-V. Depress Anxiety 2009, 0:1-18.
- [19]Breslau J, Aguilar-Gaziola S, Kendler KS, Su M, Williams DR, Kessler RC: Specifying race-ethnic differences in risk for psychiatric disorder in a USA national sample. Psychol Med 2006, 36:57-68.
- [20]Collins PY, Patel V, Joestl SS, March D, Insel TR, Daar AS, Anderson W, Dhansay MA, Phillips A, Shurin S, Walport M, et al.: Grand challenges in global mental health. Nature 2011, 475:27-30.
- [21]Patel V: Cultural factors and international epidemiology. Br Med Bull 2001, 57:33-45.
- [22]Lee S, Tsang A, Zhang M-Y, Huang Y-Q, He Y, Liu Z-R, Shen Y, Kessler RC: Lifetime prevalence and inter-cohort variation in DSM-IV disorders in metropolitan China. Psychol Med 2007, 37:61-71.
- [23]Wittchien H-U, Robins LN, Cottler LB, Sartorius N, Burke JD, Regier D: Cross-cultural Feasibility, Reliability and Sources of Variance of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Br J Psychiatry 1991, 159:645-653.
- [24]Andrews G, Peters L: The psychometic properties of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 1998, 33:80-88.
- [25]Kessler RC, Üstün TB: The World Mental Health (WMH) Survey Initiative Version of the World Health Organization (WHO) Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 2004, 13:93-121.
- [26]Phan T, Steel Z, Silove D: An ethnographically derived measure of anxiety, depression and somatization: the Phan Vietnamese psychiatric scale. Transcult Psychiatry 2004, 41:200-232.
- [27]Steel Z, Silove D, Chey T, Bauman A, Phan T: Mental disorders, disability and health service use amongst Vietnamese refugees and the host Australian population. Acta Psychiatr Scand 2005, 111:300-309.
- [28]Mollica R, Caspi-Yavin Y, Bollini P, Truong T, Tor S, Lavelle J: The Harvard Trauma Questionnaire; validating a cross cultural instrument for measuring torture, trauma, and post-traumatic stress disorder in Indochina refugees. J Nerv Ment Dis 1992, 180:111-116.
- [29]Silove D, Steel Z, Bauman A, Chey T, McFarlane A: Trauma, PTSD, and the longer-term mental health burden amongst Vietnamese refugees: A comparison with the Australian-born population. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 2007, 42:467-476.
- [30]Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS): Mental health and wellbeing: profile of adults. Canberra, Australia: Australian Bureau of Statistics; 1998.
- [31]Bracken BA, Barona A: State of the art procedures for translating, validating and using psychoeducational tests in cross-cultural assessment. School Psychol Int 1991, 12:119-132.
- [32]Hosmer DW, Lemeshow S: Applied Logistic Regression. New York: Wiley & Sons; 2000.
- [33]Voracek M, Loibl LM, Dervic K, Kapusta ND, Niederkrotenthaler T, Sonneck G: Consistency of immigrant suicide rates in Austria with country-of-birth suicide rates: a role for genetic risk factors for suicide? Psychiatry Res 2009, 170:286-289.
- [34]Steel Z, Silove D, Phan T, Bauman A: Long-term effect of psychological trauma on the mental health of Vietnamese refugees resettled in Australia: a population-based study. Lancet 2002, 360:1056-1062.
- [35]Mollica RF, McInnes K, Pham T, Smith Fawzi MC, Murphy E, Lien L: The dose-effect relationships between torture and psychiatric symptoms in Vietnamese ex-political Detainees and a comparison group. J Nerv Ment Dis 1998, 186:543-553.
- [36]Kessler RC, Birnbaum HG, Shahly V, Bromet E, Hwang I, McLaughlin KA, Sampson N, Andrade LH, De Girolamo G, Demyttenaere K, et al.: Age differences in the prevalence and co-morbidity of DSM-IV major depressive episodes: results from the WHO World Mental Health Survey initiative. Depress Anxiety 2010, 27:351-364.
- [37]Kessler RC, Birnabaum H, Bromet E, Hwang I, Sampson N, Shahly V: Age differences in major depression: results from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R). Psychol Med 2010, 40:225-237.
- [38]Cardoso JB, Thompson SJ: Common themes of resilience among Latino immigrant families: a systematic review of the literature. Families in Society 2010, 91:257-265.
- [39]Parks CD, Vu AD: Social dilemma behavior of individuals from highly individualist and collectivist cultures. J Conflict Resol 1994, 38:708-718.
- [40]Lim M, Stormshak EA, Falkenstein CA: Psychosocial adjustment and substance use of Cambodian and Vietnamese immigrant youth. J Cross Cult Psychol 2011, 42:104-119.
- [41]Kleinman AM: Depression, somatization and the “New cross-cultural” psychiatry. Soc Sci Med 1977, 11:3-10.
- [42]Kirmayer LJ: Culture, context and experience in psychiatric diagnosis. Psychopathology 2005, 38:192-196.
- [43]Alarcon RD: Culture, cultural factors and psychiatric diagnosis: review and projections. World Psychiatry 2009, 8:131-139.
- [44]Alarcon RD, Becker AE, Lewis-Fernandez R, Like RC, Desai P, Foulks E, Gonzales J, Hansen H, Kopelowicz A, Lu GG, et al.: The role of culture in psychiatric diagnosis. J Nerv Ment Dis 2009, 197:559-560.