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Mental Health, Work Presenteeism, and Exercise in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Citazione:
Mental Health, Work Presenteeism, and Exercise in Inflammatory Bowel Disease / Sciberras, M; Karmiris, K; Nascimento, C; Tabone, T; Nikolaou, P; Theodoropoulou, A; Mula, A; Goren, I; Yanai, H; Amir, H; Mantzaris, Gj; Georgiadi, T; Foteinogiannopoulou, K; Koutroubakis, I; Allocca, M; Fiorino, G; Furfaro, F; Katsanos, K; Fousekis, F; Michalopoulos, G; Camilleri, L; Torres, J; Ellul, P. - In: JOURNAL OF CROHN'S AND COLITIS. - ISSN 1873-9946. - 16:8(2022), pp. 1197-1201. [10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjac037]
Abstract:
Background Chronic diseases, such as IBD, can lead to anxiety and depression which can have a significant impact on productivity at work [presenteeism]. The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of depression/anxiety, presenteeism and exercise levels among IBD patients. Methods This was a multicentre study whereby adult IBD patients, in clinical remission, were asked to answer a questionnaire anonymously. Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score [HADS], Stanford Presenteeism Scale [SPS-6] and Godin Exercise Score were also collected. Results A total of 585 patients were recruited. The majority had Crohn's disease [CD, 62.2%] and were male [53.0%], with a median age of 39 years [IQR 30-49]. A psychiatric diagnosis was present in 10.8% of patients prior to their IBD diagnosis. A further 14.2% of patients were psychiatrically diagnosed after IBD diagnosis, this being commoner in CD patients [41.6% of CD, p <0.01]. A raised HADS-Anxiety or a HADS-Depression score >= 8 was present in 46.1% of patients, with 27.4% having a score >= 11. Low presenteeism at work was present in 34.0%. Patients diagnosed with depression/anxiety had a more sedentary lifestyle [p <0.01], lower presenteeism at work [p Conclusions A significant percentage of IBD patients in remission suffer from anxiety and/or depression. Risk factors for these are CD, female gender, use of biologic medications, long-standing and/or perianal disease. Depression/anxiety was associated with a sedentary lifestyle, lower presenteeism at work and unemployment. Validated screening tools and appropriate referrals to psychologists and/or psychiatrists should be employed within IBD clinics.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Sciberras, M; Karmiris, K; Nascimento, C; Tabone, T; Nikolaou, P; Theodoropoulou, A; Mula, A; Goren, I; Yanai, H; Amir, H; Mantzaris, Gj; Georgiadi, T; Foteinogiannopoulou, K; Koutroubakis, I; Allocca, M; Fiorino, G; Furfaro, F; Katsanos, K; Fousekis, F; Michalopoulos, G; Camilleri, L; Torres, J; Ellul, P
Autori di Ateneo:
FURFARO FEDERICA
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.unisr.it/handle/20.500.11768/178686
Pubblicato in:
JOURNAL OF CROHN'S AND COLITIS
Journal
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