| Literature DB >> 28762078 |
Felippe Lazar-Neto1, Andressa C Sposato Louzada1, Ricardo Faé de Moura2, Fernando Morelli Calixto2, Marcia C Castro3.
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to assess the frequency of depression symptoms among Brazilian immigrants living in Massachusetts, the second largest Brazilian immigrant population in the United States, and to identify correlates of depression. A convenience sample of Brazilian immigrants aged 18 or older residing in Massachusetts was used. Data were collected from December 2013 to March 2014, in the Consulate General of Brazil in Boston and in three religious events, using a structure questionnaire and the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). Depression symptoms were observed in 35.3% of the respondents, with equal distribution by sex. Correlates of depression were low income, being single, poor English proficiency, and poor self-perception of health. These results suggest a need for community outreach, sensitization, and counseling, in Portuguese and adapted to the culture of Brazilian immigrants.Entities:
Keywords: Brazilian immigrants; CES-D; Depression symptoms
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 28762078 PMCID: PMC6061077 DOI: 10.1007/s10903-017-0632-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immigr Minor Health ISSN: 1557-1912
Characteristics of study participants stratified by the presence of depression symptoms based on CES-D score
| Variables | Total subjects | CES-D Score | χ2a | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CES-D <15 | CES-D ≥15 | ||||||
| Marital status | 15.330*** | ||||||
| Single | 92 | (23.1%) | 45 | (48.9%) | 47 | (51.1%) | |
| Married/civil union | 259 | (64.9%) | 185 | (71.4%) | 74 | (28.6%) | |
| Divorced/widowed | 48 | (12.0%) | 30 | (62.5%) | 18 | (37.5%) | |
| Monthly income (US$) | 19.674*** | ||||||
| >$3500 | 97 | (26.2%) | 81 | (83.5%) | 16 | (16.5%) | |
| $1500–$3500 | 165 | (44.6%) | 102 | (61.8%) | 63 | (38.2%) | |
| <$1500 | 108 | (29.2%) | 60 | (55.6%) | 48 | (44.4%) | |
| English language proficiency | 14.251*** | ||||||
| Fluent | 148 | (37.0%) | 109 | (73.7%) | 39 | (26.4%) | |
| Good | 108 | (27.0%) | 75 | (69.4%) | 33 | (30.6%) | |
| Regular, bad or do not speak | 144 | (36.0%) | 77 | (53.5%) | 67 | (46.5%) | |
| Self-perception of health | 9.256** | ||||||
| Very good | 105 | (26.5%) | 79 | (75.2%) | 26 | (24.8%) | |
| Good | 197 | (49.6%) | 128 | (70.0%) | 69 | (35.0%) | |
| Regular or worst | 95 | (23.9%) | 52 | (54.7%) | 43 | (45.3%) | |
| Age | 1.455 | ||||||
| 18–34 years | 151 | (38.7%) | 97 | (64.2%) | 54 | (35.8%) | |
| 35–49 years | 173 | (44.4%) | 109 | (63.0%) | 64 | (37.0%) | |
| ≥50 years | 66 | (16.9%) | 47 | (71.2%) | 19 | (28.8%) | |
| Has health insurance | 4.785* | ||||||
| Yes | 328 | (83.7%) | 221 | (67.4%) | 107 | (32.6%) | |
| No | 64 | (16.3%) | 34 | (53.1%) | 30 | (46.9%) | |
| Access to public space | 1.290 | ||||||
| Yes | 340 | (86.5%) | 226 | (66.5%) | 114 | (33.5%) | |
| No | 53 | (13.5%) | 31 | (58.5%) | 22 | (41.5%) | |
| Sex | 0.004 | ||||||
| Man | 173 | (43.4%) | 112 | (64.7%) | 61 | (35.3%) | |
| Woman | 226 | (56.6%) | 147 | (65.0%) | 79 | (35.0%) | |
| BMI | 0.191 | ||||||
| Normal | 193 | (54.2%) | 126 | (65.3%) | 67 | (34.7%) | |
| Overweight/obese | 163 | (45.8%) | 110 | (67.5%) | 53 | (32.5%) | |
| Weight self-perception | 3.282 | ||||||
| Ideal | 209 | (25.6%) | 140 | (67.0%) | 69 | (33.0%) | |
| Under | 12 | (3.0%) | 5 | (41.7%) | 7 | (58.3%) | |
| Over | 176 | (44.3%) | 113 | (64.2%) | 63 | (35.8%) | |
| Education | 4.731 | ||||||
| Primary school | 63 | (15.8%) | 35 | (55.6%) | 28 | (44.4%) | |
| High school | 147 | (36.9%) | 93 | (63.3%) | 54 | (36.7%) | |
| University | 137 | (34.4%) | 94 | (68.6%) | 43 | (31.4%) | |
| Graduated | 51 | (12.8%) | 37 | (72.6%) | 14 | (27.5%) | |
| Smoking | 0.168 | ||||||
| Yes | 29 | (7.4%) | 20 | (69.0%) | 9 | (31.0%) | |
| No | 365 | (92.6%) | 238 | (65.2%) | 127 | (34.8%) | |
| Worked in the past 3 months | 0.004 | ||||||
| Yes | 364 | (92.2%) | 237 | (65.1%) | 127 | (34.9%) | |
| No | 31 | (7.9%) | 20 | (64.5%) | 11 | (35.5%) | |
| Alcohol consumption | 1.190 | ||||||
| Yes | 184 | (46.8%) | 125 | (67.9%) | 59 | (32.1%) | |
| No | 209 | (53.2%) | 131 | (62.7%) | 78 | (37.3%) | |
| Has a chronic disease | 1.133 | ||||||
| Yes | 59 | (14.7%) | 42 | (71.2%) | 17 | (36.0%) | |
| No | 342 | (85.3%) | 219 | (64.0%) | 123 | (28.8%) | |
| Exercised in the past 3 months | 0.0316 | ||||||
| Yes | 259 | (65.1%) | 170 | (65.6%) | 89 | (34.4%) | |
| No | 139 | (34.9%) | 90 | (64.8%) | 49 | (35.3%) | |
| Time in US | 10.525*** | ||||||
| <12 years | 185 | (46.5%) | 105 | (56.8%) | 80 | (43.2%) | |
| ≥12 years | 213 | (53.5%) | 154 | (72.3%) | 59 | (27.7%) | |
| Time in city | 2.495 | ||||||
| <9 years | 189 | (48.2%) | 115 | (60.9%) | 74 | (39.2%) | |
| ≥9 years | 203 | (51.8%) | 139 | (68.5%) | 64 | (31.5%) | |
| Women by age group | 0.7932 | ||||||
| >49 years | 35 | (16.0%) | 25 | (71.5%) | 10 | (28.6%) | |
| 18–49 years | 184 | (84.0%) | 117 | (63.6%) | 67 | (36.4%) | |
aChi-square test, *p < 0.05; **p ≤ 0.01; ***p ≤ 0.001
Fig. 1Univariate logistic regression models on the presence of depression symptoms in the entire sample, and stratified by sex. Bars across each coefficient point estimate represent the 95% confidence interval.
Multivariate logistic regression models on the presence of depression symptoms
| Variables | Model (1) | Model (2) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | |
| Marital status | ||||
| Single | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Married/civil union | 0.32 | (0.17–0.60) | 0.12 | (0.04–0.34) |
| Divorced/widowed | 0.49 | (0.20–1.17) | 0.12 | (0.02–0.58) |
| Married/civil union women | 4.96 | (1.36–18.14) | ||
| Divorced/widowed women | 7.99 | (1.20–53.24) | ||
| Monthly income (US$) | ||||
| >$3500 | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| $1500–$3500 | 3.07 | (1.49–6.31) | 3.03 | (1.43–6.43) |
| <$1500 | 3.05 | (1.40–6.67) | 3.07 | (1.37–6.90) |
| English language proficiency | ||||
| Fluent | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Good | 1.90 | (0.95–3.80) | 1.99 | (0.98–4.05) |
| Regular, bad or do not speak | 2.37 | (1.17–4.80) | 2.35 | (1.13–4.88) |
| Self-perception of health | ||||
| Very good | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Good | 1.33 | (0.72–2.49) | 5.87 | (1.67–20.67) |
| Regular or worst | 2.19 | (1.08–4.47) | 10.67 | (2.57–44.22) |
| Good women | 0.12 | (0.03–0.51) | ||
| Regular or bad women | 0.12 | (0.02–0.63) | ||
| Age | ||||
| 18–34 years | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| 35–49 years | 1.54 | (0.85–2.80) | 1.54 | (0.83–2.84) |
| ≥50 years | 0.91 | (0.38–2.14) | 0.97 | (0.40–2.35) |
| Has health insurance | 1.27 | (0.62–2.57) | 1.41 | (0.65–3.03) |
| Women | 0.98 | (0.57–1.67) | 1.61 | (0.38–6.78) |
| Has lived ≥12 years in the US | 0.60 | (0.33–1.08) | 0.62 | (0.34–1.15) |
| Education | ||||
| Primary school | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| High school | 0.75 | (0.36–1.55) | 0.90 | (0.42–1.94) |
| University | 0.92 | (0.41–2.04) | 1.04 | (0.45–2.42) |
| Graduate school | 0.72 | (0.24–2.08) | 0.94 | (0.31–2.88) |
| ROC | 0.7462 | 0.7780 | ||
OR odds ratio, CI confidence intervals