Author:
SPINHOVEN P.,VAN DER DOES A. J. W.
Abstract
Background. According to DSM-III-R V-code conditions refer
to marital relationships, family
circumstances, interpersonal relationships, or stressful life events that
are not attributable to a
mental disorder but that are the focus of treatment. The purpose of the
present study was to assess
the prevalence and patient and treatment characteristics of adult psychiatric
out-patients diagnosed
with V-code conditions.Methods. The records of all 5660 consecutive admissions to
a psychiatric out-patient clinic over a
12-year period were studied retrospectively. On the basis of both primary
and secondary
DSM-III-R diagnoses on Axis I, two subgroups of patients were compared:
(1) patients with V-code
conditions; and (2) patients with mental disorders.Results. Fourteen per cent of the patients had a V-code condition
and no mental disorder, while the
remaining patients were diagnosed with mental disorder (with or without
an additional V-code
condition). Comparisons of sociodemographic and clinical severity characteristics
of the two groups
indicated that patients with V-code conditions tended to have a higher
socio-economic status and
to present with less severe problems as assessed both by the primary therapist
and the
Symptom-Checklist-90. With respect to service use and treatment outcome
variables, it appeared that V-code
patients tended to be more frequently treated by couple/family therapy
and to receive a slightly
lower number of treatment sessions.Conclusions. The pattern of results in The Netherlands seems
comparable to results of previous
North American studies. Implications of these findings for future studies
and for use of mental
health services are discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
5 articles.
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