Author:
Leff J.,Wig N. N.,Menon D. K.,Bedi H.,Kuipers L.,Ghosh A.,Bedi H.,Menon D. K.,Kuipers L.,Korten A.,Ernberg G.,Day R.,Sartorius N.,Jablensky A.
Abstract
We conducted a one-year follow-up of patients who had made a first contact with psychiatric services in Chandigarh, North India, and had been assigned a diagnosis of schizophrenia. The expressed emotion (EE) of the patients' relatives was assessed early on. We found the same associations between the individual components of EE and relapse of schizophrenia as in previous Anglo-American studies, but only the association between hostility and relapse was statistically significant. Applying the same criteria as in the Anglo American studies for ‘high EE’, we found a significant relationship between high EE and relapse. This relationship was not explained by other factors often associated with higher relapse rates. We conclude that the significantly better outcome of Chandigarh first-contact patients compared with a London sample is largely due to the significantly lower proportion of high-EE relatives in the North Indian sample.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
167 articles.
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