Depression in arthritis patients often untreated | Arthritis Information

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NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People with arthritis seem to have an elevated rate of depression, but the disorder goes untreated more often than not, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that among more than 130,000 Canadians in a national health survey, those with arthritic conditions were more likely to suffer from symptoms of depression. Ten percent met the criteria for major depression, compared with roughly 7 percent of adults without arthritis.

When the researchers weighed other factors -- like age, sex and socioeconomics -- arthritis sufferers were twice as likely as others to have depression. They were also more likely to acknowledge having suicidal thoughts in the past year.

But while major depression was relatively common, it often went unaddressed. Fewer than half of adults with arthritis and depression said they had consulted a mental health professional, the researchers report in the journal Arthritis & Rheumatism.

The findings suggest that doctors should screen arthritis patients for signs of depression, write Dr. Esme Fuller-Thomson and Yael Shaked of the University of Toronto.

Their findings are based on survey data from 130,880 Canadian adults, more than 23,000 of whom said they had been diagnosed with arthritis or rheumatism -- which refers to any painful condition affecting the joints and connective tissue, such as rheumatoid arthritis.

Based on a standard questionnaire used to diagnose depression, 10 percent of adults with arthritic conditions had the disorder. Women, as well as adults who were young, single or lower-income, were at relatively higher risk.

Three percent of arthritis sufferers said they had seriously contemplated suicide in the past year, compared with just over 2 percent of other adults. Again, younger and lower-income adults were at greater risk, as were men.

Arthritis sufferers' pain levels were also closely linked to their odds of depression, while physical limitations and disability were associated with suicidal behavior.

Depression screening, the researchers note, may be especially important for these higher-risk arthritis patients.

Improved arthritis knowledge might also help, Fuller-Thomson and Shaked point out. A previous study showed that arthritis patients who were more educated about their condition were less likely to suffer depression.

"In sum," the researchers write, "health care professionals play a key role in assisting individuals in developing coping strategies to deal with their depression in relation to their arthritic diagnosis and the daily stress induced by arthritis."

SOURCE: Arthritis & Rheumatism, July 15, 2009.

Does anyone RD ask about depression?  Mine doesn't.  Actually, I don't remember any of my drs asking about it.
Phats
 
My RD already had that talk with me.  She said she felt it was important for me to be aware of all of the ways RA could effect my life.  Said that I shouldn't be  afraid to come and talk to her if I felt I was having  problems with depression.  I am glad she spoke with me, but I hope it never comes to  that.

I think it is important for our dr's to talk to us about it.  RA is a life changing disease and can be life threatening.  It is so easy to get depressed with all these changes. 

Phats

 

My RD asked me early on if I thought I was depressed. I told him I didn't think so, but he put me on Cymbalta anyway...more for the neuropathy I was having in my feet than for depression. After a couple of months of being on Cymbalta, I was able to look back and say that I probably was depressed with everything that was going on with the RA, because I sure felt mentally better after being on it for a few months.My RD asks often about depression..... My RD discussed depression with me very early on and asks at nearly every visit. When I admitted that I was living on the edge of my emotions she called my PCP and wrote a 30 day supply of anti-depressants and agreed to have him do the follow-up as he is only a short drive from where I live. My RD is more than 2 hours away.

I agree that more physicians should speak candidly with their RA patients and recommend therapy far more often than they seem to.

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