What a Large-Scale Study Finds About Depression

A population-based Danish study tracked more than 6.5 million people from 1995 to 2022.
What a Large-Scale Study Finds About Depression
Illustration by The Epoch Times, Shutterstock
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People diagnosed with medical conditions face a higher risk of major depressive disorder, especially in the critical months after diagnosis.

“A diagnosis can disrupt everything—your sense of identity, your sense of safety, and even who you thought you’d be in the future. It can feel like grief, like mourning the version of you that existed before,” Dr. Sulagna Misra, an integrative medicine doctor, told The Epoch Times.

Zena le Roux
Zena le Roux
Author
Zena le Roux is a health journalist with a master’s in investigative health journalism and a certified health and wellness coach specializing in functional nutrition. She is trained in sports nutrition, mindful eating, internal family systems, and applied polyvagal theory. She works in private practice and serves as a nutrition educator for a UK-based health school.