impact factor, citescore
logo
 

Full Papers

 

Burden of depressive symptoms in South African public healthcare patients with established rheumatoid arthritis: a case-control study.


, , , ,

 

CER4059
2011 Vol.29, N°3
PI 0506, PF 0512
Full Papers

Free to view
(click on article PDF icon to read the article)

PMID: 21640040 [PubMed]

Received: 08/08/2010
Accepted : 03/02/2011
In Press: 29/06/2011
Published: 29/06/2011

Abstract

OBJECTIVES:
The burden of depressive symptoms and how demographic and disease characteristics relate to depressive symptoms in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) that belong to developing populations, are currently unknown and were therefore assessed in a case-control study in public healthcare patients in South Africa, a lower-middle income country. Public healthcare attendance is a surrogate of belonging to the developing population in South Africa.
METHODS:
Demographic and RA features were recorded in 441 public and 202 private healthcare patients. The outcome characteristic was the Arthritis Impact Measure Scales (AIMS) depression score. Relationships of patient characteristics and public healthcare attendance with depressive symptoms were determined in multivariable regression models.
RESULTS:
The mean ± SD AIMS depression score was 3.6±2.1 and 2.3±1.7 in public and private healthcare patients, respectively (p<0.0001 before and after adjustment for covariates). Physical disability was associated with depressive symptoms in both healthcare sectors. Other characteristics that were related to depressive symptoms comprised younger age, male sex and pain in public healthcare patients and fatigue and non-use of disease modifying agents in private healthcare patients. In all patients, public healthcare attendance (standardised ß [95% CI]=0.22 [0.12, 0.32], p<0.0001) and physical disability (standardised β [95% CI]=0.25 [0.16, 0.34], p<0.0001) were most strongly associated with depressive symptoms.
CONCLUSIONS:
The burden of depressive symptoms is markedly enhanced in our developing population with RA, independent of age, sex, ethnic origin and disease characteristics. In this setting, the role of social factors should be assessed and, despite restricted resources, depressive symptoms should be routinely addressed.

Rheumatology Article