Depression as a Mediator of the Association Between Vision and/or Hearing Loss and Recent Substance Use: NHANES 2013–2018
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-1-2024
Identifier/URL
43005328 (Pure); 38135562 (PubMed)
Abstract
Background: Previous research has demonstrated a significant association between vision and/or hearing loss and lifetime substance use. Objective: The objective of this analysis was to assess whether depression mediates the association between vision and/or hearing loss and recent substance use (RSU). Methods: Data from 9408 NHANES 2013–2018 participants were used for a survey-weighted analysis to assess whether the indirect effect (IE) of disability status (neither, vision loss only, hearing loss only, both) on the outcome RSU (past 30-day use of marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamine, or heroin) was mediated by recent (past 2 weeks) depression (Patient Health Questionnaire- 9 items score; none = 0–4, mild or greater = 5+), adjusting for confounders. Results: The estimated prevalence of vision and/or hearing loss, mild or greater depression, and RSU were 6.7 %, 24.1 %, and 16.8 %. RSU was significantly positively associated with disability status before (p = .018) but not after adjusting for depression (p = .160), and the indirect effects were statistically significant (p < .001). Conclusions: The data are consistent with the hypothesis that recent depression mediates the association between vision and/or hearing loss and RSU. Initiatives may be needed that incorporate a focus on the prevention, management, or care for depression to intervene on the pathway between hearing and/or vision loss and RSU.
Repository Citation
McClintock, H. F.,
Hinson-Enslin, A. M.,
& Nahhas, R. W.
(2024). Depression as a Mediator of the Association Between Vision and/or Hearing Loss and Recent Substance Use: NHANES 2013–2018. Disability and Health Journal, 17 (2), 101575.
https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/comhth/490
DOI
10.1016/j.dhjo.2023.101575

Comments
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