Author:
Harrison G.,Hopper K.,Craig T.,Laska E.,Siegel C.,Wanderling J.,Dube K. C.,Ganev K.,Giel R.,Der Heiden W. An,Holmberg S. K.,Janca A.,Lee P. W. H.,León C. A.,Malhotra S.,Marsella A. J.,Nakane Y.,Sartorius N.,Shen Y.,Skoda C.,Thara R.,Tsirkin S. J.,Varma V. K.,Walsh D.,Wiersma D.
Abstract
BackgroundPoorly defined cohorts and weak study designs have hampered cross-cultural comparisons of course and outcome in schizophrenia.AimsTo describe long-term outcome in 18 diverse treated incidence and prevalence cohorts. To compare mortality, 15- and 25-year illness trajectory and the predictive strength of selected baseline and short-term course variables.MethodHistoric prospective study. Standardised assessments of course and outcome.ResultsAbout 75% traced. About 50% of surviving cases had favourable outcomes, but there was marked heterogeneity across geographic centres. In regression models, early (2-year) course patterns were the strongest predictor of 15-year outcome, but recovery varied by location; 16% of early unremitting cases achieved late-phase recovery.ConclusionsA significant proportion of treated incident cases of schizophrenia achieve favourable long-term outcome. Sociocultural conditions appear to modify long-term course. Early intervention programmes focused on social as well as pharmacological treatments may realise longer-term gains.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
803 articles.
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