首页> 外文期刊>The Lancet Planetary Health >Change in prescriptions for antidepressant drugs after flooding in England, 2011–14: a controlled, interrupted time-series study
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Change in prescriptions for antidepressant drugs after flooding in England, 2011–14: a controlled, interrupted time-series study

机译:英格兰洪水后抗抑郁药处方变更,2011-14年:一项受控制的中断时间序列研究

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BackgroundFloods are the most common type of natural disaster globally. Climate change and the pressures of development to accommodate increasing population sizes could increase the number of people at risk of flooding. Although the immediate risk of death and injury from flooding is small in high-income countries, reports suggest that flooding has prolonged adverse effects on mental wellbeing. However, evidence is scarce because most previous studies have used surveys or self-reports, without robust pre-flood records. This methodological limitation applies to other natural and man-made disasters.MethodsWe investigated the mental health effects of floods in England using routine prescriptions data from pre-flood and post-flood periods in flooded and non-flooded populations. We examined prescription records for drugs used in the management of common mental disorders from 930 primary care practices located within 10 km of large flood events in England in 2011–14. We conducted a controlled, interrupted time-series analysis of the number of prescribing items for antidepressant drugs in the years before and after the flood. Pre–post changes were compared by distance of the practice from the flooded boundaries. Analyses were controlled for neighbourhood deprivation and population density or the number of prescriptions for non-antidepressant drugs.FindingsAfter controlling for neighbourhood deprivation and population density, prescriptions for antidepressant drugs among practices located within 1 km of a flood increased by 0·59% (95% CI 0·24–0·94) in the year after the flood compared with practices furthest (5–10 km) from the flood. The results did not change after controlling for non-antidepressant drugs. The increase in prescriptions was greater in more socioeconomically deprived than in less socioeconomically deprived areas.InterpretationWe found that the number of prescribing items for antidepressant drugs increased in the year after a flood in primary care practices close to major floods in England in 2011–14. This small percentage increase would, if caused by flooding, reflect a much larger increase in flooded households, which made up only a small proportion of the total number of households registered with these practices. Moreover, despite the increase being small in relative terms, it, together with the well-known high prevalence of mental disorders in the UK, suggests a substantial mental health burden after flooding, which has implications for public health practices. More detailed linkage studies are required to disentangle the effect of flood exposure on individual patients from the observed increase in prescriptions for antidepressant drugs at primary care practices. We are currently extending this study to include prescribing data for individual patients in primary care practices.FundingEconomic and Social Research Council (ES/L007517/1) and the National Institute for Health Research, Health Protection Research Unit in Environmental Change and Health.
机译:背景洪水是全球最常见的自然灾害类型。气候变化和适应不断增长的人口规模的发展压力可能会增加遭受洪灾危险的人数。尽管在高收入国家,洪灾造成的死亡和伤害的直接风险很小,但报告表明,洪灾已延长了对心理健康的不利影响。但是,证据很少,因为以前的大多数研究都使用了调查或自我报告,而没有可靠的洪水前记录。这种方法学上的局限性也适用于其他自然和人为灾难。方法我们使用洪水前和洪水后洪水和非洪水人口的常规处方数据调查了英国洪水的心理健康影响。我们检查了2011-14年度英格兰大洪水事件发生10公里以内的930种初级保健实践中用于管理常见精神障碍的药物处方记录。我们对洪水前后的几年中抗抑郁药处方药的数量进行了受控,中断的时间序列分析。通过实践与淹没边界之间的距离来比较前后变化。对邻里剥夺和人口密度或非抗抑郁药的处方数量进行了分析。发现在控制了邻里剥夺和人口密度后,位于洪灾1 km之内的实践中抗抑郁药的处方增加了0·59%(95相较于距洪灾最远(5-10 km)的做法,水灾发生后一年的CI(CI 0·24-0.94)%。对照非抗抑郁药后,结果没有改变。在社会经济贫困的地区,处方药的增长比在社会经济贫困程度较低的地区的增长更大。如果由洪水引起,百分比的小幅增长将反映出被洪水淹没的家庭的增长幅度更大,这些家庭仅占通过这些做法注册的家庭总数的一小部分。此外,尽管相对而言增加幅度很小,但与英国众所周知的精神障碍高发率相比,这表明洪水后精神健康负担沉重,这对公共卫生实践产生了影响。需要进行更详细的关联研究,才能从初级保健实践中观察到的抗抑郁药处方增加中解开洪水对个体患者的影响。我们目前正在扩大这项研究的范围,以包括针对基层医疗实践中的个别患者的处方数据。基金会经济和社会研究理事会(ES / L007517 / 1)和美国国立卫生研究院,环境变化与健康研究中心的健康保护研究组。

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