Abstract

Background

There are no previous whole-country studies on mental health and relationships with general health in intellectual disability populations; study results vary.

Aims

To determine the prevalence of mental health conditions and relationships with general health in a total population with and without intellectual disabilities.

Method

Ninety-four per cent completed Scotland's Census 2011. Data on intellectual disabilities, mental health and general health were extracted, and the association between them was investigated.

Results

A total of 26 349/5 295 403 (0.5%) had intellectual disabilities. In total, 12.8% children, 23.4% adults and 27.2% older adults had mental health conditions compared with 0.3, 5.3 and 4.5% of the general population. Intellectual disabilities predicted mental health conditions; odds ratio (OR)=7.1 (95% CI 6.8–7.3). General health was substantially poorer and associated with mental health conditions; fair health OR=1.8 (95% CI 1.7–1.9), bad/very bad health OR=4.2 (95% CI 3.9–4.6).

Conclusions

These large-scale, whole-country study findings are important, given the previously stated lack of confidence in comparative prevalence results, and the need to plan services accordingly.

Details

Title
Prevalence of mental health conditions and relationship with general health in a whole-country population of people with intellectual disabilities compared with the general population
Author
Hughes-McCormack, Laura A 1 ; Rydzewska Ewelina 1 ; Henderson, Angela 1 ; MacIntyre, Cecilia 2 ; Rintoul, Julie 3 ; Cooper, Sally-Ann 1 

 Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Mental Health and Wellbeing Group, Gartnavel Royal Hospital, Glasgow, UK 
 National Records of Scotland, Edinburgh, UK 
 Health and Social Care Analysis, Scottish Government, Edinburgh, UK 
Pages
243-248
Section
Paper
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Sep 2017
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
e-ISSN
20564724
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2216713941
Copyright
© 2017 This article is published under (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/) (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.