Author:
Cheadle A. J.,Freeman H. L.,Korer J.
Abstract
SummaryA sample of 190 patients, diagnosed as schizophrenic by the same psychiatrist, have been surveyed in an urban community and their clinical and social status assessed. Compared to the local population as a whole, a significantly greater proportion of the men had never married, and although the women had married at approximately the same rate as those in the general population, 25 per cent of them had been divorced by the time of the interview. Assessments of the subjects' clinical condition by the Present State Examination were analysed into four groups of syndromes. Only 27 patients showed schizophrenic or paranoid symptoms, whereas neurotic symptoms were not only prevalent but seemed to cause most of the reported personal problems. Twenty-eight patients were free of symptoms at the time of interview. The great majority of the sample (72 per cent) were being maintained on long-acting neuroleptics. These data will form the baseline to assess a monitoring system, designed to keep the local psychiatric services in touch with schizophrenic patients who might otherwise drop out of treatment.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference10 articles.
1. A census of psychiatric patients in an urban community
2. The assessment of psychiatric and social state;Leff;British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology,1976
Cited by
58 articles.
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