Evidence-Based Reviews

College students with depressive symptoms with and without fatigue: Differences in functioning, suicidality, anxiety, and depressive severity

Author and Disclosure Information

Nyer et al examined whether fatigue was associated with greater symptomatic burden and functional impairment.


 

References

Nyer et al examined whether fatigue was associated with greater symptomatic burden and functional impairment in 287 college students with depressive symptoms using data from the self-report Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). Students endorsing significant symptoms of depression (BDI score ≥13) were grouped into 3 levels: no fatigue, mild fatigue, or moderate/severe fatigue. Researchers compared the 3 levels of fatigue across a battery of psychiatric and functional outcome measures.

The study found that depressed college students with symptoms of fatigue demonstrated functional impairment and symptomatic burden that worsened with increasing levels of fatigue. The authors call for more attention to assessing and treating symptoms of fatigue within this population.

Recommended Reading

APA: Botox tied to lifting of refractory depression
MDedge Psychiatry
APA: Predictive analytics and big data hold promise in mood disorders
MDedge Psychiatry
APA: Transcranial near-infrared light could be useful in depression
MDedge Psychiatry
Slower teen reaction times may increase anxiety and depression risk later in life
MDedge Psychiatry
Fatigue after depression responds to therapy. What are the next steps?
MDedge Psychiatry
PSYCHIATRY UPDATE 2015
MDedge Psychiatry
AAS: The ‘sad truth’ about suicide risk assessment scales
MDedge Psychiatry
A physician who feels hopeless and worthless and complains of pain
MDedge Psychiatry
Fatigue associated with depression
MDedge Psychiatry
AAS: Acute suicidal affective disturbance proposed as new diagnosis
MDedge Psychiatry