Contributed by Nicole Weaver| 06 June, 2005  21:01 GMT
 'Given the enormous personal and societal burdens of mental disorders, these observations should lead us to direct a greater part of our thinking about public health interventions to the child and adolescent years and ... to focus on early interventions.'
About half of Americans reported having symptoms that would qualify them for a diagnosis of a mental disorder over the course of their lifetime, with most mental illness beginning in childhood or adolescence, according to Ronald C. Kessler, Ph.D., of Harvard Medical School and colleagues,
based on their analysis of data from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R).
Their findings are published in the June issue of
Archives of General Psychiatry.
Half of All Cases Start by Age 14
Lifetime prevalence for the different classes of disorders were: anxiety disorder, 28.8 percent; mood disorders, 20.8 percent; impulse-control disorders, 24.8 percent; substance use disorders, 14.6 percent and lifetime prevalence for any disorder, 46.4 percent.
Median age of onset is much earlier for anxiety and impulse-control disorders (11 years for both) than for substance use (20 years) and mood disorders (30 years), the researchers found.
Half of all lifetime cases start by age 14 years and three fourths by age 24 years.
Early Intervention Needed
"The NCS-R results clearly document that mental disorders are highly prevalent, that lifetime prevalence is, if anything, underestimated, that age-of-onset distribution for most of the disorders considered herein are concentrated in a relatively narrow age range during the first two decades of life, and that later onset disorders occur in large part as temporally secondary comorbid conditions," the authors note.
"Given the enormous personal and societal burdens of mental disorders, these observations should lead us to direct a greater part of our thinking about public health interventions to the child and adolescent years and, with appropriately balanced considerations of potential risks and benefits, to focus on early interventions aimed at preventing the progression of primary disorders and the onset of comorbid disorders," they conclude. |
|