Logo of Robert Koch InstituteLogo of Robert Koch Institute
Publication Server of Robert Koch Instituteedoc
de|en
View Item 
  • edoc-Server Home
  • Artikel in Fachzeitschriften
  • Journal of Health Monitoring
  • View Item
  • edoc-Server Home
  • Artikel in Fachzeitschriften
  • Journal of Health Monitoring
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
All of edoc-ServerCommunity & CollectionTitleAuthorSubjectThis CollectionTitleAuthorSubject
PublishLoginRegisterHelp
StatisticsView Usage Statistics
All of edoc-ServerCommunity & CollectionTitleAuthorSubjectThis CollectionTitleAuthorSubject
PublishLoginRegisterHelp
StatisticsView Usage Statistics
View Item 
  • edoc-Server Home
  • Artikel in Fachzeitschriften
  • Journal of Health Monitoring
  • View Item
  • edoc-Server Home
  • Artikel in Fachzeitschriften
  • Journal of Health Monitoring
  • View Item
2019-12-11Zeitschriftenartikel DOI: 10.25646/6227
Depressive symptoms in a European comparison – Results from the European Health Interview Survey (EHIS) 2
Robert Koch-Institut
Depression is associated with a significant individual and social burden of disease. The European Health Interview Survey (EHIS) provides data that can be used to compare the situation in Germany to that of other European countries. Data was evaluated from 254,510 interviewees from Germany and 24 additional Member States of the European Union (EU). Depressive symptoms as defined by the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8) were used as an indicator of depression. The prevalence in Germany (9.2%) is higher than the European average (6.6%). However, when the severity of depression is taken into account, only the prevalence of mild depressive symptoms is higher (6.3% versus 4.1%). In Germany, young people display depressive symptoms more frequently (11.5% versus 5.2%) than older people (6.7% versus 9.1%). These results should be discussed against the backdrop of differences in age and social structure and point toward a need for prevention and provision of care targeting younger people in Germany, in particular.
Files in this item
Thumbnail
JoHM_04_2019_Depressive_symptoms_DE_EU.pdf — Adobe PDF — 2.496 Mb
MD5: 9f96868416755be4d4facbf6b462b124
Cite
BibTeX
EndNote
RIS
(CC BY 4.0) Namensnennung 4.0 International(CC BY 4.0) Namensnennung 4.0 International
Details
Terms of Use Imprint Policy Data Privacy Statement Contact

The Robert Koch Institute is a Federal Institute

within the portfolio of the Federal Ministry of Health

© Robert Koch Institute

All rights reserved unless explicitly granted.

 
DOI
10.25646/6227
Permanent URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.25646/6227
HTML
<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.25646/6227">http://dx.doi.org/10.25646/6227</a>