Common Mental Disorders and Disability Across Cultures. Results from the WHO Collaborative Study on Psychological Problems in General Health Care
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Objective: To examine the impact of common mental illness on functional disability and the cross-cultural consistency of this relationship while controlling for physical illness. A secondary objective was to determine the level of disability associated with specific psychiatric disorders.
Design: A cross-sectional sample selected by two-stage sampling.
Setting: Primary health care facilities in 14 countries covering most major cultures and languages.
Patients: A total of 25,916 consecutive attenders of these facilities were screened for psychopathology using the General Health Questionnaire (96% response). Screened patients were sampled from the General Health Questionnaire score strata for the second-stage Composite International Diagnostic Interview administered to 5447 patients (62% response).
Main Outcome Measures: Patient-reported physical disability, number of disability days, and interviewer-rated occupational role functioning.
Results: After controlling for physical disease severity, psychopathology was consistently associated with increased disability. Physical disease severity was an independent, although weaker, contributor to disability. A dose-response relationship was found between severity of mental illness and disability. Disability was most prominent among patients with major depression, panic disorder, generalized anxiety, and neurasthenia; disorder-specific differences were modest after controlling for psychiatric comorbidity. Results were consistent across disability measures and across centers.
Conclusions: The consistent relationship of psychopathology and disability indicates the compelling personal and socioeconomic impact of common mental illnesses across cultures. This suggests the importance of impairments of higher-order human capacities (eg, emotion, motivation, and cognition) as determinants of functional disability.
A Community Prevalence Study of Psychiatric Disorders in Barangay Tenejero, City of Balanga, Bataan.
Quezon-Santos A, Gapuz E Acta Med Philipp. 2025; 58(22):52-64.
PMID: 39817115 PMC: 11732592. DOI: 10.47895/amp.vi0.8386.
Chen W, Chaou C, Ng C, Chang Y BMC Med Educ. 2024; 24(1):1205.
PMID: 39449010 PMC: 11515569. DOI: 10.1186/s12909-024-06216-1.
Jimenez-Barragan M, Falguera-Puig G, Curto-Garcia J, Monistrol O, Coll-Navarro E, Tarrago-Grima M BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2024; 24(1):500.
PMID: 39054429 PMC: 11270936. DOI: 10.1186/s12884-024-06695-6.
Falgas-Bague I, Melero-Dominguez M, de Vernisy-Romero D, Tembo T, Chembe M, Lubozha T PLoS One. 2024; 19(1):e0287269.
PMID: 38181004 PMC: 10769019. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0287269.
Kornfield R, Lattie E, Nicholas J, Knapp A, Mohr D, Reddy M Proc ACM Hum Comput Interact. 2023; 7(CSCW2).
PMID: 38094872 PMC: 10718568. DOI: 10.1145/3610093.