Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 44, Issue 5, 2003, Pages 420-427

Depression trajectories in relatively recent immigrants (Article)

Aroian K.J.* , Norris A.E.
  • a Wayne State University, College of Nursing, Department of Anthropology, Detroit, MI, United States, Wayne State University, Cohn Building, 5557 Cass Ave, Detroit, MI 48202, United States
  • b Boston College, School of Nursing, Boston, MA, United States

Abstract

This longitudinal study of 253 ever-depressed former Soviet immigrants (1) examined the life circumstances, demographic characteristics, and immigration demands of individuals whose depression lifted, or who remained or became depressed over a 2-year period; and (2) investigated whether immigration demands, local relatives, age at immigration, gender, education, employment, and marital status differed among the three groups. Depression was determined based on depression scores at baseline and at 2-year follow-up. Forty-three percent of the sample remained depressed, 26% became depressed, and 30% had their depression lift over the course of 2 years. The three groups did not differ with regard to demographic characteristics or loss of employment or a negative change in marital status over the 2-year study period. They did differ with respect to the presence of local family and immigration demands (P < .05). Those who remained depressed were less likely to have family in the area and had the highest immigration demand score at both time points. However, the effect for presence of local family was not significant when immigration demands were included in the analysis (P = .32). Analysis of variance (ANOVA) for repeated measures revealed that the group whose depression lifted experienced the greatest change in immigration demand scores over the 2-year study period. Our findings argue that clinicians should not expect immigrants' depression to always decrease over time and should assess depression by asking about immigration demands, even if depression was not present during an earlier clinical encounter. © 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

education rating scale immigrant depression demography follow up sex difference immigration human life event marriage family male female Article major clinical study adult age Analysis of Variance employment

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0141855011&doi=10.1016%2fS0010-440X%2803%2900103-2&partnerID=40&md5=f525d4439fa4602259b5e463d897be56

DOI: 10.1016/S0010-440X(03)00103-2
ISSN: 0010440X
Cited by: 43
Original Language: English