Frequent mental distress was associated with substantially higher odds of lifetime depression (aOR 10.4) among adults with diagnosed diabetes, outweighing behavioral factors.
Among adults with diabetes, lifetime diagnosed depression is strongly associated with emotional burden and adverse social conditions, highlighting the need for distress screening in diabetes care.
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Background/Objectives: Depression is a common and consequential comorbidity among adults with diagnosed diabetes. Prior research has largely emphasized individual health behaviors, with less attention to emotional burden, social context, or theory-driven interpretation. The Multi-Theory Model (MTM) of Health Behavior Change offers an integrative framework for examining behavioral, emotional, and environmental correlates of health outcomes. This study applied MTM to examine correlates of lifetime diagnosed depression among U.S. adults with diagnosed diabetes. Methods: This cross-sectional study analyzed 2023 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) data from 19,967 adults with diagnosed diabetes, representing approximately 30 million U.S. adults after survey weighting. Lifetime diagnosed depression was assessed based on respondents reporting that a health professional had told them they had a depressive disorder, representing a lifetime history of depression rather than current depressive symptoms. Independent variables were organized into behavioral, emotional, and environmental domains consistent with MTM. Survey-weighted descriptive analyses, Rao–Scott χ2 tests, and nested survey-weighted logistic regression models were conducted. Results: The weighted prevalence of lifetime diagnosed depression among adults with diagnosed diabetes was 24.3%. In the fully adjusted MTM-guided model, emotional and environmental domains showed the strongest associations with lifetime diagnosed depression. Frequent mental distress was associated with substantially higher odds of depression (adjusted odds ratio ≈ 10.4, p < 0.001). High social or economic stress and fair or poor self-rated health remained independently associated (p < 0.001). Behavioral factors, including physical activity, smoking, and body mass index, were attenuated after adjustment. Conclusions: Lifetime diagnosed depression among adults with diagnosed diabetes was more strongly associated with emotional burden and adverse social conditions than with health behavior alone, supporting the integration of distress screening and context-responsive interventions into diabetes care.
Khandoker et al. (Sat,) reported a other. Frequent mental distress was associated with substantially higher odds of lifetime depression (aOR 10.4) among adults with diagnosed diabetes, outweighing behavioral factors.