Lifetime prevalence, risk, and treatment of mood and anxiety disorders in Qatar's national mental health study
Author | Khaled, Salma Mawfek |
Author | Alhussaini, Nour W. Z. |
Author | Alabdulla, Majid |
Author | Sampson, Nancy A. |
Author | Kessler, Ronald C. |
Author | Woodruff, Peter W. |
Author | Al-Thani, Sheik Mohammed |
Available date | 2025-01-23T07:03:13Z |
Publication Date | 2024 |
Publication Name | International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research |
Resource | Scopus |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mpr.2011 |
ISSN | 10498931 |
Abstract | Objectives: To estimate lifetime prevalence, risk, and treatment for mental disorders and their correlates in Qatar's general population for the first time. Methods: We conducted a national phone survey of 5,195 Qatari and Arab residents in Qatar (2019-2022) using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview Version 3.3 and estimated lifetime mood and anxiety defined diagnoses. Survival-based discrete time models, lifetime morbid risk, and treatment projections were estimated. Results: Lifetime prevalence of any disorder was 28.0% and was associated with younger cohorts, females, and migrants, but lower formal education. Treatment contact in the year of disorder onset were 13.5%. The median delay in receiving treatment was 5 years (IQR=2-13). Lifetime treatment among those with a lifetime disorder were 59.9% for non-healthcare and 63.5% for healthcare; it was 68.1% for any anxiety and 80.1% for any mood disorder after 50 years of onset. Younger cohorts and later age of onset were significantly predictors of treatment. Conclusions: Lifetime prevalence of mental disorders in Qatar is comparable to other countries. Treatment is significantly delayed and delivered largely in non-healthcare sectors thus the need for increased literacy of mental illness to reduce stigma and improve earlier help-seeking in healthcare settings. |
Sponsor | This survey was conducted by the Social and Economic Survey Research Institute (SESRI) of Qatar University, as one of the component of the World Mental Health study in Qatar. Authors of this study would like to extend their gratitude to: the director of SESRI (Dr. Kaltham Al-Ghanim), the research team at SESRI (Dr. Abdoulaye Diop, Dr. Le Trung Kien, Marwa Al-Assi, Iman Amro, Amal Ali, Lina Bader, Ikram Boukhelif, Veena Davis, Engi El-Maghraby, Catalina Petcu, Yossra Sayed, Hamdeh Shamsi); the study's translation & adaptation team (Dr. Abdellatif Sellami, Dr. Suhad Daher-Nashif, Nada Mohamed Khalil Rayan, Arij Yehya, Zaher Ahmed Askar, and Ghefari Elsayed); the CATI Team at SESRI (John Lee Pratt Holmes, Abdelrahman Rahmany, CATI Interviewers), and the Information Technology department at SESRI including Mr. Anis Miladi, Mr. Isam Abdelhameed, Mr. Ayman Alkahlout, Ms. Rihab Souai, Ms. Ikram Boukhelif, and Ms. Nafisa Hamza. We also like to extend our gratitude to Ian Tulley and Mahmoud Al-Raisi from the Department of Psychiatry, Mental Health Service, HMC, Qatar; Harvard Medical School, Department of Health Policy, USA (Edward Chiu, Marrena Lindberg); and University of Michigan, Institute of Social Research, USA (Sarah Broumand, Jennifer Kelley, Gina-Qian Cheung, and Zeina Mneimneh). This study was funded by HMC (Qatar) through Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust (UK)\u2014Award number: 0XS0002. Qatar University Open Access publishing facilitated by the Qatar National Library, as part of the Wiley - Qatar National Library agreement. |
Language | en |
Publisher | John Wiley and Sons Ltd |
Subject | 5th edition (DSM-5) diagnostic and statistical manual lifetime prevalence lifetime treatment mental disorder Qatar |
Type | Article |
Volume Number | 33 |
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