Things Everyone Should Know About Dysthymic Disorder

Dysthymia Prevalence

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Up to five percent of the general population, which equals to about three million Americans, are affected by dysthymic disorder. Women are three times more likely to be diagnosed than men, but men with dysthymia are at a higher risk of death. The average age of diagnosis is thirty-one years old. However, it is also common in teens and young adults, as well as older generations, with early-onset defined as occurring before the age of twenty-one, and late-onset if diagnosed at or over twenty-one years old. Individuals in the mid-forty to mid-fifty age range are twice as likely to be diagnosed than those aged eighteen to twenty-nine years old, and nearly three times as likely as individuals sixty years old or older, but most often begins early in childhood, adolescence, or young adulthood.

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