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Declining clinical course of psychotic disorders over the two decades following first hospitalization: Evidence from the suffolk county mental health project

  • Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

81 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: Kraepelin considered declining course a hallmark of schizophrenia, but others have suggested that outcomes usually stabilize or improve after treatment initiation. The authors investigated this question in an epidemiologically defined cohort with psychotic disorders followed for 20years after first hospitalization. Method:TheSuffolkCountyMentalHealthProject recruited first-admission patients with psychosis from all inpatient units of Suffolk County, New York (response rate, 72%). Participants were assessed in person six times over two decades; 373 completed the 20-year follow-up (68% of survivors); 175 had schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder. Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF), psychotic symptoms, and mood symptoms were rated at each assessment. Month 6, when nearly all participants were discharged from the index hospitalization, was used as a reference. Results: In the schizophreniagroup,meanGAF scoresdeclined from 49 at month 6 to 36 at year 20. Negative and positive symptoms also worsened (Cohen'sdvalues, 0.45-0.73).Among participants without schizophrenia, GAF scores were higher initially (a mean of approximately 64) but declined by 9 points over the follow-up period. Worsening began between years 5 and 8. Neither aging nor changes in antipsychotic treatment accounted for the declines. In all disorders, depression improved andmanicsymptomsremained low across the20years. Conclusions: The authors found substantial symptom burden across disorders that increased with time and ultimately may undo initial treatment gains. Previous studies have suggested that better health care delivery models may preempt this decline. In the United States, these care needs are often not met, and addressing them is an urgent priority.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1064-1074
Number of pages11
JournalThe American journal of psychiatry
Volume174
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2017

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