Author:
MAES H. H. M.,NEALE M. C.,KENDLER K. S.,HEWITT J. K.,SILBERG J. L.,FOLEY D. L.,MEYER J. M.,RUTTER M.,SIMONOFF E.,PICKLES A.,EAVES L. J.
Abstract
Background. Previous studies on assortment for psychiatric
disorders have reported discrepant
findings. We aimed to test whether there is a significant association for
psychiatric diagnoses,
including alcoholism, generalized anxiety disorder, major depressive disorder,
panic disorder and
phobias between husbands and wives in two population-based samples. We
further evaluated
whether marital resemblance occurs primarily within or across psychiatric
disorders and if
assortment for psychopathology is primary or secondary to assortment for
correlated variables.Methods. A model for mate selection addressed whether the correlation
between mates for
psychiatric disorders arises from direct assortment (primary homogamy)
or through correlation
with other variables for which assortment occurs (secondary homogamy) or
through cross-variable
assortment. The model accounted for within-person co-morbidity as well
as across-spouse data.Results. Findings suggested that a moderate degree of assortment
exists both within and across
psychiatric diagnoses. Only a small amount of the observed marital resemblance
for mental illness
could be explained by assortment for correlated variables such as age,
religious attendance and
education. Similar results were obtained for the two samples separately
and confirmed in their joint
analysis, revealing that the co-morbidity and assortment findings, except
for the marital correlation
for age, religious attendance and education, replicate across samples.Conclusions. Significant but moderate primary assortment exists
for psychiatric disorders. The bias
in twin studies that have ignored the small amount of assortment is negligible.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
180 articles.
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