Abstract

OBJECTIVESAchieving national health equity is currently a pressing issue. Large regional variations in the health determinants are observed. Depression, one of the most common mental disorders, has large variations in incidence among different populations, and thus must be regionally analyzed. The present study aimed at analyzing regional disparities in depressive symptoms and identifying the health determinants that require regional interventions.METHODSUsing health indicators of depression in the Korea Community Health Survey 2011 and 2013, the Moran’s I was calculated for each variable to assess spatial autocorrelation, and a validated geographically weighted regression analysis using ArcGIS version 10.1 of different domains: health behavior, morbidity, and the social and physical environments were created, and the final model included a combination of significant variables in these models.RESULTSIn the health behavior domain, the weekly breakfast intake frequency of 1-2 times was the most significantly correlated with depression in all regions, followed by exposure to secondhand smoke and the level of perceived stress in some regions. In the morbidity domain, the rate of lifetime diagnosis of myocardial infarction was the most significantly correlated with depression. In the social and physical environment domain, the trust environment within the local community was highly correlated with depression, showing that lower the level of trust, higher was the level of depression. A final model was constructed and analyzed using highly influential variables from each domain. The models were divided into two groups according to the significance of correlation of each variable with the experience of depression symptoms.CONCLUSIONSThe indicators of the regional health status are significantly associated with the incidence of depressive symptoms within a region. The significance of this correlation varied across regions.

Highlights

  • Achieving health equity is a pressing current issue

  • Large variations in health indicators and health determinants are seen across regions [3,4], yet research on the factors associated with the regional health status is rare

  • We aim to identify health determinants that require regional intervention by analyzing regional variations of depression and propose a methodology and method of presentation of research results that can be used in future research on regional disparities in health status

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Achieving health equity is a pressing current issue It involves resolving health inequalities, which are the differences in health. Large variations in health indicators and health determinants are seen across regions [3,4], yet research on the factors associated with the regional health status is rare. While chronic diseases have received much attention, and have been consistently managed nationally, mental disorders have often been overlooked as being unimportant and have not been actively managed despite the fact them being an issue that affects individuals, but the society as a whole [10]. One of the most common mental disorders, has shown large regional variations among different populations [11,12], necessitating research on its regional

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call