Mental Multimorbidity Among General-Population Adults: Sex-Specific Sociodemographic Profiles of Anxiety, Insomnia, and Eating Disorders - Centre de recherche en épidémiologie et statistiques
Article Dans Une Revue International Journal of Public Health Année : 2024

Mental Multimorbidity Among General-Population Adults: Sex-Specific Sociodemographic Profiles of Anxiety, Insomnia, and Eating Disorders

Résumé

Objective: To determine the prevalence and sociodemographic profiles of mental morbidity and multimorbidity. Methods: A descriptive analysis was performed with data from 25,269 women and 8,389 men from the French NutriNet-Santé general-population cohort. Participants were split into 8 groups: 1. No mental morbidity; 2. Pure anxiety; 3. Pure insomnia; 4. Pure eating disorders (ED); 5. Comorbid anxiety and insomnia; 6. Comorbid anxiety and ED; 7. Comorbid insomnia and ED; 8. Multimorbid anxiety, insomnia, and ED. Data were weighted using the 2016 French Census and analyzed with Chi 2 tests. Results: 40.6% of the participants had ≥1 mental disorder; 2.3% had all 3 disorders. Most pure and comorbid disorders were more common in women than in men. The multimorbidity group had the largest proportions of men who were overweight (52.1%) and current smokers (23.2%). Men with insomnia and ED were the most likely to have obesity (45.8%) and low physical activity (44.3%). Women with ≥2 disorders were the most likely to be current smokers. Conclusion: The findings could inform research, prevention, and public health guidelines for multimorbidity.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
2024_Andreeva_Multimorb_SES.pdf (807.87 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origine Fichiers produits par l'(les) auteur(s)

Dates et versions

hal-04776841 , version 1 (12-11-2024)

Licence

Identifiants

Citer

Valentina A Andreeva, Nathalie Arnault, Stephanie Chambaron, Cécilia Samieri, Marie-Claude Brindisi, et al.. Mental Multimorbidity Among General-Population Adults: Sex-Specific Sociodemographic Profiles of Anxiety, Insomnia, and Eating Disorders. International Journal of Public Health, 2024, 69, pp.1607546. ⟨10.3389/ijph.2024.1607546⟩. ⟨hal-04776841⟩
39 Consultations
12 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

More