Obesity and depression: link is strongest among Caucasians and those with more education
An analysis, conducted by researchers from Group Health Center for Health Studies, found that there is a strong link between obesity and mood and anxiety disorders, especially among Caucasian Americans and those with more education and higher income.
The study, published in the Archives of General Psychiatry, found that an obese person is about 25 percent more likely than a non-obese person to have a mood or anxiety disorder, such as depression. It also indicated that among Caucasian Americans and more educated people who are obese, that likelihood may be as high as 44 percent.
While the study did not show whether obesity leads to depression or vice versa, "it's almost certain that the association works in both directions," said Greg Simon, a Group Health psychiatrist and the lead author of the study.
The researchers also found a negative association between obesity and substance abuse. That is, an obese person is 25 percent less likely than a non-obese person to have had a substance abuse disorder sometime in their lives.
Simon pointed to the evidence that an average American has a 30 percent chance of being obese. This study shows that when a person is depressed, the odds of also becoming obese are as high as 40 percent.
About 20 percent of Americans are diagnosed sometime in their lives with depression. "Among those who are obese, that likelihood of depression jumps to 28 percent," said Simon.
The study is based on an in-person survey that the researchers from Harvard Medical School conducted among a nationally representative sample of 9,125 adult men and women.
Obesity is defined in the study as having a body mass index ( BMI ) of 30 or more.
While previous studies have shown a connection between obesity and depression, this is the largest and most representative study of the two problems in U.S. population. Also, this study included a much more careful assessment of mental health problems than earlier research, according to Simon.
Unlike many previous studies that show a link between obesity and depression among women only, this study revealed a strong link in both genders. There were significant differences among social and cultural groups. In groups where obesity is more common--that is, among non-white and less educated groups--there is less depression among the people who are obese. But in groups where there is less obesity, it is accompanied by more depression.
This may indicate that stigma accounts for some of the relationship between obesity and depression, said Simon. " Perhaps in groups where obesity is less socially normative, it's less acceptable and that's why there's a greater association with depression, " he suggested. " But in groups where it is less stigmatized, obesity doesn't seem to be as depressing."
Source: Group Health Cooperative Center for Health Studies, 2006
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