Abstract
Evidence suggests high rates of psychiatric disorders in bariatric surgery candidates (e.g., Kalarchian et al., 2007; Mitchell et al., in press), although no rigorous studies have examined the prevalence in a Canadian sample. As such, the first purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of Axis I disorders, and associations with quality of life, in a sample of consecutively referred bariatric surgery candidates at the Toronto Western Hospital Bariatric Surgery Program. In light of emerging evidence linking emotion regulation difficulties with diverse psychiatric symptoms, the second purpose of this study was to examine whether emotion regulation difficulties were common or specific determinants of mood, anxiety, and eating psychodiagnostic categories, as such information would help inform interventions. Three hundred and twenty-one bariatric surgery candidates (80.1% female; M age = 44.37 years) were assessed using a structured psychodiagnostic interview and completed questionnaires of health-related quality of life and emotion regulation difficulties. Results indicated that 54.5% of patients met DSM-IV-TR criteria for a lifetime psychiatric diagnosis and 18.4% met criteria for a current psychiatric disorder. Major depressive disorder was the most common lifetime psychiatric disorder and binge eating disorder was the most prevalent current psychiatric disorder. Compared to patients without a current Axis I disorder, participants diagnosed with a current Axis I disorder reported significantly worse functioning on most mental and physical health domains (p’s < .01). Overall, a series of regression analyses revealed that difficulties regulating emotions accounted for unique variance in current mood and anxiety disorder status (p’s < .001). Difficulties in emotion regulation were not significantly associated with current eating disorder status after Bonferroni correction. Taken together, these results confirm the high rates of psychiatric disorders in a Canadian sample of bariatric surgery candidates and provide evidence for associated functional health impairment. The data also add to the growing body of literature demonstrating emotion regulation difficulties across psychodiagnostic categories and are consistent with suggestions that psychosocial interventions for bariatric patients might benefit from directly targeting difficulties in emotion regulation. Further study of these associations is needed to replicate these findings and elucidate how difficulties in emotion regulation interact with psychopathology to affect patients’ post-operative outcomes.
Highlights
Most bariatric surgery programs require patients to have a pre-operative mental health assessment (Bauchowitz et al, 2005; Devlin et al, 2004; Santry et al, 2006) due to the impact that psychosocial variables may have on post-operative outcome
High rates of psychopathology have been documented in bariatric surgery patients (Kalarchian et al, 2007; Mühlhans et al, 2009; Muri et al, 2008; Rosenberger et al, 2006), no rigorous study to date has examined the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in a Canadian sample of bariatric patients
Using a structured psychodiagnostic interview and DSM-IV-TR diagnostic criteria, the first purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in 321 bariatric surgery candidates
Summary
The first purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of Axis I disorders, and associations with quality of life, in a sample of consecutively referred bariatric surgery candidates at the Toronto Western Hospital Bariatric Surgery Program. In light of emerging evidence linking emotion regulation difficulties with diverse psychiatric symptoms, the second purpose of this study was to examine whether emotion regulation difficulties were common or specific determinants of mood, anxiety, and eating psychodiagnostic categories, as such information would help inform interventions. The first purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of current and lifetime psychiatric disorders in a sample of Canadian bariatric surgery candidates. Using a structured psychodiagnostic interview and DSM-IV-TR diagnostic criteria, the first purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in 321 bariatric surgery candidates. In light of emerging evidence that emotion regulation difficulties may be transdiagnostic factors underlying various types of psychopathology, the second purpose of this study was to examine whether the diverse psychiatric difficulties that bariatric surgery patients may exhibit might have an emotion regulation piece in common
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