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No Association between Fish Intake and Depression in over 15,000 Older Adults from Seven Low and Middle Income Countries–The 10/66 Study

BACKGROUND: Evidence on the association between fish consumption and depression is inconsistent and virtually non-existent from low- and middle-income countries. Using a standard protocol, we aim to assess the association of fish consumption and late-life depression in seven low- and middle-income c...

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Autores principales: Albanese, Emiliano, Lombardo, Flavia L., Dangour, Alan D., Guerra, Mariella, Acosta, Daisy, Huang, Yueqin, Jacob, K. S., Llibre Rodriguez, Juan de Jesus, Salas, Aquiles, Schönborn, Claudia, Sosa, Ana Luisa, Williams, Joseph, Prince, Martin J., Ferri, Cleusa P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3378552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22723900
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038879
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author Albanese, Emiliano
Lombardo, Flavia L.
Dangour, Alan D.
Guerra, Mariella
Acosta, Daisy
Huang, Yueqin
Jacob, K. S.
Llibre Rodriguez, Juan de Jesus
Salas, Aquiles
Schönborn, Claudia
Sosa, Ana Luisa
Williams, Joseph
Prince, Martin J.
Ferri, Cleusa P.
author_facet Albanese, Emiliano
Lombardo, Flavia L.
Dangour, Alan D.
Guerra, Mariella
Acosta, Daisy
Huang, Yueqin
Jacob, K. S.
Llibre Rodriguez, Juan de Jesus
Salas, Aquiles
Schönborn, Claudia
Sosa, Ana Luisa
Williams, Joseph
Prince, Martin J.
Ferri, Cleusa P.
author_sort Albanese, Emiliano
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Evidence on the association between fish consumption and depression is inconsistent and virtually non-existent from low- and middle-income countries. Using a standard protocol, we aim to assess the association of fish consumption and late-life depression in seven low- and middle-income countries. METHODOLOGY/FINDINGS: We used cross-sectional data from the 10/66 cohort study and applied two diagnostic criteria for late-life depression to assess the association between categories of weekly fish consumption and depression according to ICD-10 and the EURO-D depression symptoms scale scores, adjusting for relevant confounders. All-catchment area surveys were carried out in Cuba, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Peru, Mexico, China, and India, and over 15,000 community-dwelling older adults (65+) were sampled. Using Poisson models the adjusted association between categories of fish consumption and ICD-10 depression was positive in India (p for trend = 0.001), inverse in Peru (p = 0.025), and not significant in all other countries. We found a linear inverse association between fish consumption categories and EURO-D scores only in Cuba (p for trend  = 0.039) and China (p<0.001); associations were not significant in all other countries. Between-country heterogeneity was marked for both ICD-10 (I(2)>61%) and EURO-D criteria (I(2)>66%). CONCLUSIONS: The associations of fish consumption with depression in large samples of older adults varied markedly across countries and by depression diagnosis and were explained by socio-demographic and lifestyle variables. Experimental studies in these settings are needed to confirm our findings.
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spelling pubmed-33785522012-06-21 No Association between Fish Intake and Depression in over 15,000 Older Adults from Seven Low and Middle Income Countries–The 10/66 Study Albanese, Emiliano Lombardo, Flavia L. Dangour, Alan D. Guerra, Mariella Acosta, Daisy Huang, Yueqin Jacob, K. S. Llibre Rodriguez, Juan de Jesus Salas, Aquiles Schönborn, Claudia Sosa, Ana Luisa Williams, Joseph Prince, Martin J. Ferri, Cleusa P. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Evidence on the association between fish consumption and depression is inconsistent and virtually non-existent from low- and middle-income countries. Using a standard protocol, we aim to assess the association of fish consumption and late-life depression in seven low- and middle-income countries. METHODOLOGY/FINDINGS: We used cross-sectional data from the 10/66 cohort study and applied two diagnostic criteria for late-life depression to assess the association between categories of weekly fish consumption and depression according to ICD-10 and the EURO-D depression symptoms scale scores, adjusting for relevant confounders. All-catchment area surveys were carried out in Cuba, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Peru, Mexico, China, and India, and over 15,000 community-dwelling older adults (65+) were sampled. Using Poisson models the adjusted association between categories of fish consumption and ICD-10 depression was positive in India (p for trend = 0.001), inverse in Peru (p = 0.025), and not significant in all other countries. We found a linear inverse association between fish consumption categories and EURO-D scores only in Cuba (p for trend  = 0.039) and China (p<0.001); associations were not significant in all other countries. Between-country heterogeneity was marked for both ICD-10 (I(2)>61%) and EURO-D criteria (I(2)>66%). CONCLUSIONS: The associations of fish consumption with depression in large samples of older adults varied markedly across countries and by depression diagnosis and were explained by socio-demographic and lifestyle variables. Experimental studies in these settings are needed to confirm our findings. Public Library of Science 2012-06-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3378552/ /pubmed/22723900 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038879 Text en Albanese et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Albanese, Emiliano
Lombardo, Flavia L.
Dangour, Alan D.
Guerra, Mariella
Acosta, Daisy
Huang, Yueqin
Jacob, K. S.
Llibre Rodriguez, Juan de Jesus
Salas, Aquiles
Schönborn, Claudia
Sosa, Ana Luisa
Williams, Joseph
Prince, Martin J.
Ferri, Cleusa P.
No Association between Fish Intake and Depression in over 15,000 Older Adults from Seven Low and Middle Income Countries–The 10/66 Study
title No Association between Fish Intake and Depression in over 15,000 Older Adults from Seven Low and Middle Income Countries–The 10/66 Study
title_full No Association between Fish Intake and Depression in over 15,000 Older Adults from Seven Low and Middle Income Countries–The 10/66 Study
title_fullStr No Association between Fish Intake and Depression in over 15,000 Older Adults from Seven Low and Middle Income Countries–The 10/66 Study
title_full_unstemmed No Association between Fish Intake and Depression in over 15,000 Older Adults from Seven Low and Middle Income Countries–The 10/66 Study
title_short No Association between Fish Intake and Depression in over 15,000 Older Adults from Seven Low and Middle Income Countries–The 10/66 Study
title_sort no association between fish intake and depression in over 15,000 older adults from seven low and middle income countries–the 10/66 study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3378552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22723900
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038879
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