Prevalence and risk factors for depressive symptom in methamphetamine use disorder

Ti-Fei Yuan,Ziqi Liu,Yi Zhang

Stress and Brain(2021)

Cited 1|Views0
No score
Abstract
Background:Methamphetamine use disorder (MUD) is a severe public health problem, accompanying physical and psychological impairment. Depression is a common comorbidity with MUD, which is associated with poor treatment outcome. The objective of this study is to investigate the prevalence of depressive symptoms among male MUD individuals and identify potential risk factors.Method:A total of 483 male MUD individuals from six drug rehabilitation centers were included for analysis. The demographic information, drug use history, and clinical performances were analyzed. We conducted multiple regression analysis to identify predictive factors of depression, and examined the difference among MUD individuals with different depression severity.Result:89.03% of MUD individuals exhibited depressive symptoms. Length of abstinence (β = -0.006, p = 0.003) and subjective craving (β = 0.052, p R2 = 0.010, r = -0.102, p = 0.024) negatively associated with depression severity. Depressive symptoms also positively associated with anxiety (R2 = 0.171, r = 0.413, p R2 = 0.133, r = 0.365, p R2 = 0.012, r = 0.111, p = 0.015).Conclusions:The prevalence of depressive symptoms in MUD individuals is high. Abstinence and Craving days are important predictive factors for depression severity.
More
Translated text
Key words
methamphetamine use disorder,depression,abstinence days,craving
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined