Mauling of the "Celtic Tiger": clinical characteristics and outcome of first-episode depression secondary to the economic recession in Ireland.

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Authors

Thekiso, Thekiso B
Heron, Elizabeth A
Masood, Barkat
Murphy, Matt
McLoughlin, Declan M
Kennedy, Noel

Issue Date

2013-08-12

Type

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

en

Keywords

Depression , Economic recession , Psychiatric epidemiology , Suicide

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Abstract

There is a dearth of studies describing clinical characteristics and outcome of patients who present with mood disorders related to economic recession.
To describe a cohort of patients admitted with first-episode depression related to the Irish economic recession and compare this cohort with all other first-episode depressives admitted during the same time period (2009-2010).
A cohort of 137 patients admitted with first-episode depression to an independent university teaching hospital was prospectively identified and followed up from admission over 2 years (mean follow-up 430 days, s.d. 176 days). The cohort was divided into "Celtic Tiger" (patients with first-episode depression secondary to the economic recession) and non-Celtic Tiger control patients (other first-episode depressed patients). Both groups were compared in terms of clinical characteristics at baseline and outcome over follow-up.
The number of admissions due to first depressive episodes were higher in recession years 2009/10 than in pre-recession years 2008/9. Celtic Tiger patients were predominantly male and more severely depressed with more marked suicidal ideation (χ(2), p<0.001) than control patients. They were more likely to recover (χ(2), p=0.013), less likely to recur (χ(2), p<0.001) and had faster time to recovery (log rank, p<0.001) and slower time to full recurrence (log rank, p=0.001). The Celtic Tiger patients spent more time asymptomatic and less time at full and subthreshold depression levels over follow-up.
Study setting of centre specializing in affective disorders treatment, retrospective nature of follow-up after initial prospective interview and lack of patient follow-up interview.
The study describes a subgroup of patients with severe depression associated with economic recession with likely high suicide risk but very favourable outcome.

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Citation

Thekiso, T. B., Heron, E. A., Masood, B., Murphy, M., McLoughlin, D. M., & Kennedy, N. (2013). Mauling of the "Celtic Tiger": clinical characteristics and outcome of first-episode depression secondary to the economic recession in Ireland. Journal of affective disorders, 151(2), 455–460. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2013.06.024

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© 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Journal

Journal of affective disorders

Volume

151

Issue

2

PubMed ID

ISSN

1573-2517

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