September 16, 2021

U.S. health claims data show link between ADHD, depression, and suicidal behavior

A research team used a large U.S. health insurance claims database that encompasses over 130private insurance payers and more than 50 million persons. They, identified387,968 young adults 18 through 25 years old with at least two claims for ADHD, including 225,705 males and 162,263 females. From the same database, they identified an identically sized group of controls, matched by sex and age, who had no claims for ADHD. The study period covered the ten years beginning in 2005 and running through 2014. To minimize confounding, anyone with claims for autism, schizophrenia, organic brain disorder, neurologic problems, and mental retardation w excluded from both groups. Roughly half of the women with ADHD were receiving ADHD medication, and about two in five men. After controlling for known covariate – sociodemographic variables, type of insurance plan (HMO vs. PPO), and region of the U.S. – young women with ADHD were more than 2.7 times more likely to suffer from depression, and young men more than 2.2 times more likely than their normally developing peers. Suicidal ideation was found to be over 2.2 times as likely among young women with ADHD and1.6 times more likely among young men with ADHD than among their normally developing counterparts. Likewise, young adults with ADHD were found to be over 2.2 times more likely than their normally developing peers to actually attempt suicide. They were also more likely than controls to be hospitalized for depression and/or suicidal behavior. In fact, among those hospitalized, 72% of women and 66% of men had ADHD. Keeping in mind that both the ADHD group and control group were identically sized, that means males with ADHD were twice as likely to be hospitalized, and females with ADHD were almost three times as likely, as their non-ADHD peers. The authors noted, “there was an additive effect of ADHD and female sex on depression and suicidal ideation in our sample … Importantly, our study represents one of the first investigations of this interaction with adequate statistical power.” They concluded, “Given that depression and suicidality in young adulthood forebode long-term problems with depression and suicidality, as well as additional difficulties across the lifespan, future work prioritizing treatment for young adults with ADHD and depression is greatly needed.”

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