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Depression Facts and Statistics by category.


Mental
disorders are common in the United States and Internationally.
An estimated 22.1% of Americans ages 18 and older (about 1 in
5 adults) suffer from a diagnosable mental disorder in a given
year. When applied to the 2003 U.S. Census residential population
estimate, this figure translates to 46.4 million people.
In
addition, 4 of the 10 leading causes of disability in the U.S.
and other developed countries are mental disorders - major depression,
bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Many people suffer from more than one mental disorder at a given
time.
Mood
disorders cost U.S. employers 16 billion dollars in lost work
time annually.
Over
90 percent of suicide victims have a diagnosable mental disorder.
In
the U.S., mental disorders are diagnosed based on the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition (DSM-IV).



Approximately
18.8 million American adults, or about 9.5 percent of the U.S.
population age 18 and older in a given year, have a depressive
disorder.
Nearly
twice as many women (12.0 percent) as men (6.6 percent) are
affected by a depressive disorder each year. These figures translate
to 12.4 million women and 6.4 million men in the U.S.
Women
between the ages of 25-44 are most often affected by depression
with a major cause of depression in women being the inability
to express or handle Anger.
Depression
affects all people regardless of age, geographic location, demographic
or social position.
Depressive
disorders are appearing earlier in life with
the
average age of onset 50 years ago being 29 whereas recent statistics
indicate it at just 14.5yrs in today's society.
Depressive
disorders often co-occur with anxiety
disorders and substance abuse.
A
recent study sponsored by the World Health Organization and
the World Bank found unipolar major depression to be the leading
cause of disability in the United States.
See more information on Depressive
Disorders



Despite
its name, "atypical" depression is actually the most
common subtype of depression, with up to 40%
of the depressed population may be classified as having atypical
depression.
Atypical
depression tends to occur earlier in life than other forms of
depression — usually beginning in teenage years.
Patients
with atypical depression are more likely to suffer from other
mental illnesses such as social
phobia, avoidant
personality disorder, or body
dysmorphic disorder.
Atypical
depression is more common in females with nearly 70% of the
atypical population being women.



Bipolar disorder or manic depression is a disorder characterized
by cycles of depression and highs or mania.
Bipolar
disorder affects approximately 2.3 million American adults,
or about 1.2 percent of the U.S. population age 18 and older
in a given year.
Men
and women are equally likely to develop bipolar disorder.
The
average age at onset for a first manic episode is the early
20s.



Up
to 2.5 % of children in the United States suffer from depression.
In
1997, suicide was the leading cause of death of 10 to 24-year-olds.
All too often suicide is the result of extended periods of
depression.
An
early diagnosis can help children in their emotional, social
and behavioral development but can also be hard to detect
or masked by other factors.
Doctors
may be reluctant to put a label of mental illness on a young
child.



 
The
lifetime prevalence of cyclothymic disorder is 0.4 - 1.0%.
The
rate appears equal in men or women, though women more often
seek treatment.
Cyclothymia
usually develops early in adult life (late teens to early
twenties) and pursues a chronic course, although at times
the mood may be normal and stable for months at a time.




In
a given year, between 1 and 2 percent of people over age 65
living in the community, i.e., not living in nursing homes or
other institutions, suffer from major
depression and about 2 percent have dysthymia.
Recent
NIMH studies show that 13 to 27 percent of older adults have
subclinical depressions that do not meet the diagnostic criteria
for major depression or dysthymia but are associated with increased
risk of major depression, physical disability, medical illness,
and high use of health services.
Suicide
is more common among the elderly than in any other age group.
In studies of older adults who committed suicide, nearly all
had major
depression, typically a first episode, though very few had
a substance abuse disorder.
Suicide
among white males aged 85 and older was nearly six times the
national U.S. rate (65 per 100,000 compared with 11 per 100,000)
in 1996, the most recent year for which statistics are available.



Melancholic
Depression, or 'depression with melancholic features' is
a subtype of depression
characterized by the inability to find pleasure in positive
things combined with physical agitation, insomnia, or decreased
appetite.
Approximately
10% of people with depression suffer from Melancholic Depression.


 
Mixed
anxiety-depressive disorder is a new diagnostic category
defining patients who suffer from both anxiety and depressive
symptoms of limited and equal intensity accompanied
by at least some autonomic features.
Patients
diagnosed with MADD do not meet the criteria for specific
anxiety
disorders or depressive
disorders
Although
specific prevalence rates for MADD are not clear, direction
may be obtained by the National Comorbidity Survey (2005),
indicating 58% of patients diagnosed with major
depression were also found to have an anxiety disorder.



Studies
report prevalence rates from 5% to 25%, but methodological
differences among the studies make the actual prevalence
rate unclear.
Postpartum
depression ranges in severity from mild to suicidal.
Postpartum
depression (also postnatal depression) is a form of major
depression which can affect women, and less frequently
men, after childbirth.
Although
up to 80% of postpartum women suffer from the 'Baby blues'
(or maternity blues) which is merely a mild and transitory
form of 'moodiness' where symptoms typically last from a
few hours to several days, and include tearfulness, irritability,
hypochondriasis, sleeplessness, impairment of concentration,
isolation and headache. The maternity blues are not considered
a postpartum depressive disorder.



In
2001, 30,622 people died by suicide in the U.S.
More
than 90 percent of people who take their own lives have a diagnosable
mental disorder, commonly a depressive
disorder or a substance abuse disorder.
The
highest suicide rates in the U.S. are found in white men over
age 85.
In
2000, suicide was the 3rd leading cause of death among 15 to
24 year olds.
Four
times as many men as women die by suicide; however, women attempt
suicide 2-3 times as often as men.



Diagnosing
depression in children and teenagers is often difficult
because early symptoms can be hard to detect or may
be attributed to other causes. Children and adolescents
are going through rapid, age-related physical and emotional
changes that may mask and accurate diagnosis.
Up
to 8.3 percent of adolescents in the United States suffer
from depression.
Recent
research has discovered that depression onset is occurring
earlier in individuals born in more recent decades.
There
is evidence that depression emerging early in life often
persists, recurs, and continues into adulthood, and that
early onset depression may predict more severe illness
in adult life.



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