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Author Notes:

Correspondence should be sent to Corey Keyes, Emory University, Department of Sociology, Room 225 Tarbutton Hall, 1555 Dickey Dr, Atlanta, GA 30322 (e-mail: ckeyes@emory.edu). Reprints can be ordered at http://www.ajph.org by clicking the ‘‘Reprints/Eprints’’ link.

Note. The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Contributors C. L. M. Keyes conceptualized the study, supervised all aspects of its implementation, performed the analyses, and coordinated the writing of the article. S. S. Dhingra and E. J. Simoes contributed to the analyses and contributed to the writing of the article.

Contributors C. L. M. Keyes conceptualized the study, supervised all aspects of its implementation, performed the analyses, and coordinated the writing of the article. S. S. Dhingra and E. J. Simoes contributed to the analyses and contributed to the writing of the article.

Subject:

Change in Level of Positive Mental Health as a Predictor of Future Risk of Mental Illness

Tools:

Journal Title:

American Journal of Public Health

Volume:

Volume 100, Number 12

Publisher:

, Pages 2366-2371

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

Objectives. We sought to describe the prevalence of mental health and illness, the stability of both diagnoses over time, and whether changes in mental health level predicted mental illness in a cohort group. Methods. In 2009, we analyzed data from the 1995 and 2005 Midlife in the United States cross-sectional surveys (n = 1723), which measured positive mental health and 12-month mental disorders of major depressive episode, panic, and generalized anxiety disorders. Results. Population prevalence of any of 3 mental disorders and levels of mental health appeared stable but were dynamic at the individual level. Fifty-two percent of the 17.5% of respondents with any mental illness in 2005 were new cases; one half of those languishing in 1995 improved in 2005, and one half of those flourishing in 1995 declined in 2005. Change in mental health was strongly predictive of prevalence and incidence (operationalized as a new, not necessarily a first, episode) of mental illness in 2005. Conclusions. Gains in mental health predicted declines in mental illness, supporting the call for public mental health promotion; losses of mental health predicted increases in mental illness, supporting the call for public mental health protection.

Copyright information:

© American Public Health Association 2010

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