
Obesity, Depression Often Coexist in Middle-Aged Women
By Bridget Murray Law, Contributing WriterJanuary 11, 2008
Middle-aged women are much more likely to be depressed if they are obese, and
vice versa, a new study finds. Rising excess weight goes along with less
physical activity, higher calorie intake — and depression — according to the
research.
What is the reason? Depression and obesity likely fuel one another, said lead
author Gregory Simon, M.D. “When people gain weight, they’re more likely to
become depressed, and when they get depressed, they have more trouble losing
weight,” said Simon, a psychiatrist and researcher at Group Health Cooperative
in Seattle.
In the study, published in the January/February issue of General Hospital
Psychiatry, researchers interviewed 4,641 female health-plan enrollees, ages
40 to 65, by phone. The women responded to items on height, weight, exercise
levels, dietary habits and body image. They also completed the Patient Health
Questionnaire, a measure of depression symptoms.
Women with clinical depression were more than twice as likely to be obese,
defined as having a body-mass index (BMI) of 30 or more; likewise, obese women
were more than twice as likely to be depressed.
Moreover, women with BMIs at or above 30 exercised the least, had the poorest
body image and ingested 20 percent more calories than those with lower BMIs. The
depression-obesity association held even when the researchers controlled for
marital status, education, tobacco use and antidepressant use.
The association was stronger in this study than in previous, comparable ones —
possibly because the sample was predominantly white and middle-class, Simon
said: “There is some evidence that being overweight is less stigmatized for
men, for lower-income people and for women in nonwhite ethnic groups.”
The stigma of being overweight could hurt self-esteem, and thus, efforts to lose
weight, Simon said. “It’s not that these women are clueless,” he said.
“It’s that they’re hopeless.”
The takeaway for obese women is to focus on rebuilding their spirit, which can
help with losing pounds, he said.
Health care providers should glean a similar message from the study results,
said Richard Rubin, Ph.D., a Johns Hopkins University psychologist. “Providers
need to monitor for depression and treat it in overweight individuals,
especially given the dramatically increased risk of diabetes among those who are
overweight,” said Rubin, former president for health care and education of the
American Diabetes Association.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or hbns-editor@cfah.org
General Hospital Psychiatry is a peer-reviewed research journal published
bimonthly by Elsevier Science. For information about the journal, contact Wayne
Katon, M.D., at (206) 543-7177.
Simon GE, et al. Association between obesity and depression in middle-aged
women. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 30(1), 2008.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of
Health
Health Behavior News Service
Contact: Lisa Esposito, Editor
202.387.2829
hbns-editor@cfah.org