Twelve-month prevalence, persistence, severity, and treatment of mood and anxiety disorders in Qatar's national mental health study
Date
2024Author
Khaled, Salma M.Al-Thani, Sheik Mohammed
Sampson, Nancy A.
Kessler, Ronald C.
Woodruff, Peter W.
Alabdulla, Majid
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Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objectives
To estimate 12-month prevalence, persistence, severity, and treatment of mental disorders and socio-demographic correlates in Qatar.
Methods
We conducted the first national population-based telephone survey of Arab adults between 2019 and 2022 using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview and estimated 12-month DSM-5 mood and anxiety disorders and their persistence (the proportion of lifetime cases who continue to meet 12-month criteria).
Results
The 12-month prevalence of any disorder was 21.1% (10.4% mild, 38.7% moderate, and 50.9% severe) and was associated with: younger age, female, previously married, and with persistence of any disorder. Persistence was 74.7% (64.0% mood and 75.6% anxiety) and was significantly associated with secondary education or lower. Minimally adequate treatment received among those with any 12-month mental disorder was 10.6% (74.6% in healthcare and 64.6% non-healthcare sectors). Severity and the number of disorders significantly associated with each other and with treatment received (χ 2 = 7.24, p = 0.027) including adequate treatment within the mental health specialty sector (χ 2 = 21.42, p < 0.001).
Conclusions
Multimorbidity and sociodemographics were associated with 12-month mental disorder. Treatment adequacy in Qatar are comparable to high-income countries. Low treatment contact indicate need for population-wide mental health literacy programes in addition to more accessible and effective mental health services.
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- Medicine Research [1571 items ]