Abstract
The medical community continues to acknowledge a connection between depression and physical health, for example, cardiac disease.
This study addresses public awareness about depression’s effects on physical health, the relationship between cardiac disease
and depression, and preferred sources of health information, in an effort to inform future health education programs. A survey,
administered to 816 adults ages 40–69, focused on public awareness, perception of depression as an illness, its impact on
other illnesses such as heart disease, and sources of health information. (1) Eighty-three percent (83%) of respondents felt
depression was an illness; (2) a slightly higher percentage (85.8%) felt a mental disorder, like depression, could affect
the course of a physical illness; (3) respondents’ awareness of links between depression and cardiac disease ranged from 29.8%
(awareness of depression as a risk factor for coronary artery disease) to 31.6% (awareness that depression can increase the
risk of having a second heart attack); (4) print media were the most frequently cited sources of health information (22.7%);
and (5) more highly educated respondents were more informed about depression than respondents with less education. Although
a majority of respondents (1) recognized depression as an illness (2) thought it could complicate recovery from a physical
illness, less than a third of them were aware of links between cardiac disease and depression. Demographic groups differed
in their preferred sources of health information, especially across educational levels, demonstrating a need for targeted
health educational outreach in efforts to reach a variety of populations.
This study addresses public awareness about depression’s effects on physical health, the relationship between cardiac disease
and depression, and preferred sources of health information, in an effort to inform future health education programs. A survey,
administered to 816 adults ages 40–69, focused on public awareness, perception of depression as an illness, its impact on
other illnesses such as heart disease, and sources of health information. (1) Eighty-three percent (83%) of respondents felt
depression was an illness; (2) a slightly higher percentage (85.8%) felt a mental disorder, like depression, could affect
the course of a physical illness; (3) respondents’ awareness of links between depression and cardiac disease ranged from 29.8%
(awareness of depression as a risk factor for coronary artery disease) to 31.6% (awareness that depression can increase the
risk of having a second heart attack); (4) print media were the most frequently cited sources of health information (22.7%);
and (5) more highly educated respondents were more informed about depression than respondents with less education. Although
a majority of respondents (1) recognized depression as an illness (2) thought it could complicate recovery from a physical
illness, less than a third of them were aware of links between cardiac disease and depression. Demographic groups differed
in their preferred sources of health information, especially across educational levels, demonstrating a need for targeted
health educational outreach in efforts to reach a variety of populations.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Category Original Paper
- Pages 1-11
- DOI 10.1007/s11126-011-9199-6
- Authors
- Michael Blumenfield, New York Medical College and Private Practice in Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA
- Julianne K. Suojanen, Primary Care Mental Health, Department of Veterans Affairs, VA Hudson Valley Health Care System, Montrose, NY, USA
- Charlene Weiss, Westat, Rockville, MD, USA
- Journal Psychiatric Quarterly
- Online ISSN 1573-6709
- Print ISSN 0033-2720