1.Prevalence of depression and somatic symptoms among Korean elderly immigrants.
Keum Young PANG ; Man Hong LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 1994;35(2):155-161
Forty-one Korean immigrants in Washington, D.C. (of the United States) metropolitan area over age 60 were interviewed using the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (Korean version) with additional questions about culture-specific somatic symptoms identified in previous research with Korean populations. The lifetime and current prevalence were 29.27 percent and 14.63 percent, respectively, for major depression; 9.76 percent and 2.44 percent for generalized anxiety disorder; and 9.76 percent and 7.32 percent for somatization disorder. The lifetime and current rates of co-occurrence of major depression and somatization disorder were 25 percent and 33.33 percent. Subjects who met criteria for depression were more likely to experience culture-specific Korean somatic symptoms than subjects who did not meet those criteria.
Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Depression/*epidemiology
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District of Columbia/epidemiology
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*Emigration and Immigration
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Female
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Human
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Korea/ethnology
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Male
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Middle Age
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Prevalence
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Psychophysiologic Disorders/*epidemiology