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Comorbid mental disorders among adults in the mental health surveillance survey
Forman-Hoffman, V. L., Batts, K. R., Hedden, S. L., Spagnola, K., & Bose, J. (2018). Comorbid mental disorders among adults in the mental health surveillance survey. Annals of Epidemiology, 28(7), 468-474. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annepidem.2018.03.002
Purpose: To examine the prevalence and correlates of mental disorder comorbidity in the adult U.S. household population.Methods: Data are from a nationally representative sample of noninstitutionalized, civilian adults aged 18 years or older (n = 5653) who participated in the 2008-2012 Mental Health Surveillance Study. Mental disorders, including substance use disorders, were assessed by clinical interviewers using a semistructured diagnostic instrument. Analyses examined co-occurrence of mental disorders and associations with sociodemographic, functional impairment, and treatment correlates.Results: Approximately one-third of adults (31.1%, or more than 15 million) with a past-year mental disorder had a co-occurring mental disorder. Correlates of comorbidity in adjusted models included being of young age, being of non-Hispanic white race/ethnicity, having low family income, and living in a large metropolitan area. Adults with comorbid mental disorders had lower mean levels of functioning and were more likely to report past-year treatment than adults with a single disorder; they also had higher estimates of past-year perceived unmet need for care (21.7% vs. 11.6%, P < .01).Conclusions: About one in three adults with a mental disorder have a co-occurring mental disorder. Elucidating factors associated with co-occurrence may lend clues to shared etiologies, help improve prevention efforts, facilitate early identification, and improve treatment regimens. (C) 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.