Depression High Among HIV-Positive Patients: Rates Are More Than Five Times GreaterJune 14, 2004 Researchers at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, found a 57.3 percent prevalence of depression among HIV-infected patients and a 69.8 percent prevalence of depression among patients coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C (HCV). Psychiatric disorders examined in the study included depression, general anxiety disorder, panic disorder and substance abuse, said Dina Hooshyar, M.D., infectious disease fellow at the university.
Adapted from:In a general adult population of primary care patients, the prevalence of depression is estimated at 5-10 percent, Hooshyar noted. The current study looked at patients receiving HIV primary care from the university's clinic, which serves a rural population. In the study, researchers included 726 HIV patients and 215 coinfected patients, all adults. Hooshyar pointed out that coinfected HIV-HCV patients were 1.99 times more likely to have psychiatric disorders than patients with HIV only. Substance abuse, which affects an estimated 8.3 percent of the U.S. population ages 12 and up, affected 28.8 percent of HIV-infected patients in the study, Hooshyar said. She noted that 47.9 percent of HIV/HCV-infected patients indicated substance abuse. Another issue is that interferon use in treating hepatitis C is associated with new depression in patients, so clinicians may need to consider identifying and treating, when appropriate, HCV patients prior to initiating interferon therapy, Hooshyar suggested, adding that clinicians and their staff should screen HIV patients for mental disorders and substance abuse and refer patients to counseling and care when needed. Clinicians should ask patients about these issues, she said, because patients often will not volunteer such information. Hooshyar said that one reason depression is common among HIV patients is the stigma attached to the disease. In addition, patients could react badly to knowing they will need to take medicine for the rest of their lives, she said. Back to other news for June 14, 2004 AIDS Alert 03.01.04; Vol. 19; No. 3: P. 34 This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. |