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Table 2 Depression characteristics by the presence of physical pain

From: The incremental burden of pain in patients with depression: results of a Japanese survey

 

Depressed without pain (N=1523)

Depressed with pain (N=352)

 
 

n

%

n

%

p-value

Diagnosing physician (n=1,481; 338)

    

0.027

  General internist

156

10.5%

53

15.7%

 

  Psychiatrist

1250

84.4%

268

79.3%

 

  Other

75

5.1%

17

5.0%

 

Currently use prescription

1229

80.7%

274

77.8%

0.226

Depression severity (self-rated)

    

0.005

  Mild

614

40.3%

117

33.2%

 

  Moderate

697

45.8%

165

46.9%

 

  Severe

212

13.9%

70

19.9%

 

Depression severity categories (PHQ-9; n=824; 185)

    

<0.001

  None

162

19.7%

13

7.0%

 

  Mild

239

29.0%

47

25.4%

 

  Moderate

149

18.1%

40

21.6%

 

  Moderately severe

140

17.0%

41

22.2%

 

  Severe

134

16.3%

44

23.8%

 

Problems made it hard to work/function (PHQ-9; n=769; 182)

    

0.012

  Not difficult at all

126

16.4%

16

8.8%

 

  Somewhat difficult

426

55.4%

101

55.5%

 

  Very difficult

139

18.1%

35

19.2%

 

  Extremely difficult

78

10.1%

30

16.5%

 
 

Mean

SD

Mean

SD

p-value

Length of depression diagnosis (years) (n=1481; 338)

6.0

5.7

7.1

7.1

0.010*

PHQ-9 total score (n=824; 185)

11.3

7.4

14.1

7.1

<0.001

  1. Note: p-values for comparison of frequencies are from omnibus Pearson chi-square test; p-values for comparison of means are from t-test; asterisk indicates p-value adjusted for violation of homogeneity of variance assumption.