Depression is common in society. This is that everyone experiences sadness at some point (Barlow and, Durand, 2009). According to Barlow and Durand, major depression is a mental disorder that prevents individuals with weak physical and emotional symptoms from having meaningful productive lives (Barlow and Durand, 2009). If a person suffers from depression, there are many other symptoms besides psychology they may experience (Barlow and Durand, 2009).
Emotional disorders include clinical or major depression, mood disorders, and bipolar disorder, formerly known as "bipolar disorder." Suicide is the most severe complication of major depression. Approximately 10% to 15% of patients hospitalized for depression committed suicide. Like anxiety disorders, mood disorders attack about 190,000 to 200,000 American adults. Children and adolescents also tend to cause mood disorders. These diseases include Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, dementia due to disease state (eg, HIV, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, head trauma), substance dementia (substance abuse, alcohol abuse, inhalation) I will. , Multiple factors of combination toxin exposure and dementia
If severe depression or bipolar disorder is accompanied by hallucinations, delusions or delusions, it is called severe depression with psychotic features. Approximately 25% of patients hospitalized due to depression actually suffer from psychiatric depression. One in 13 people in the world will experience psychotic attacks by the age of 75. Depression is the most common among individuals who are 18-25 years old (10.9%) and belong to two or more races (10.5%). According to data from NIMH and the World Health Organization (WHO), women are twice as severe as depression in men. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 10.4% of women suffer from depression from 2013 to 2016, but men are 5.5%.
Among patients with general illness, the prevalence of major depression is higher than that of the general population. In addition, coexisting medical conditions in major depressed patients are associated with poor outcomes (794, 795). It is well known that many diseases such as stroke, hypothyroidism, pancreatic cancer and the like can cause emotional symptoms. In addition to directly causing depressive symptoms, weakness, pain and chronic diseases are often a constant source of stress, making patients susceptible to depression. In any case, because in any case, depression is not a "normal" response to the disease, treatment is necessary