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Journal ArticleDOI

The epidemiology of DSM-III-R bipolar I disorder in a general population survey

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TLDR
The type of bipolar disorder examined here is highly chronic, co-morbid and impairing, and increased efforts are required to attract current cases into appropriate treatment.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Data are presented on the general population epidemiology of DSM-III-R bipolar I disorder in the United States. METHODS: Data come from the US National Comorbidity Survey (NCS), a general population survey of DSM-III-R disorders. A modified version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview was used to make diagnoses. RESULTS: A small (N = 59) clinical reappraisal study showed that the only manic symptom profile that could validly be assessed with the CIDI is characterized by euphoria, grandiosity and the ability to maintain energy without sleep, which described approximately half of all clinically validated bipolar I cases in the NCS. Further analysis focused on this symptom profile, which involved N = 29 cases in the total sample. Lifetime prevalence was estimated to be 0.4% and 12-month prevalence only slightly lower. Caseness was negatively related to income, education and age, positively related to urbanicity, and elevated among the previously married, never married and non-whites. All cases reported at least one other NCS/DSM-III-R disorder and 59.3% reported that their episode of bipolar disorder (either mania or depression) occurred at a later age than at least one other NCS/DSM-III-R disorder. Although 93.2% of lifetime cases reported some lifetime treatment, only 44.7% of recent cases were in treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The type of bipolar disorder examined here is highly chronic, co-morbid and impairing. Increased efforts are required to attract current cases into appropriate treatment. Methodological research is needed to develop more accurate measures of other bipolar symptom profiles for use in general population epidemiological studies. Language: en

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Prevalence of and risk factors for lifetime suicide attempts in the National Comorbidity Survey.

TL;DR: All significant risk factors were more strongly related to ideation than to progression from ideation to a plan or an attempt, and prevention efforts should focus on planned attempts because of the rapid onset and unpredictability of unplanned attempts.
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The World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview short-form (CIDI-SF)

TL;DR: Results are quite encouraging in suggesting that diagnostic classifications made in the full CIDI can be reproduced with excellent accuracy with the C IDI‐SF scales, however, independent verification of this reproduction accuracy is needed in a data set other than the one in which the CIDi‐SF was developed.
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Lifetime Co-occurrence of DSM-III-R Alcohol Abuse and Dependence With Other Psychiatric Disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey

TL;DR: The results show that alcohol abuse and dependence are often associated with other lifetime NCS/DSM-III-R disorders and suggest that, at least in recent cohorts, the alcohol use disorders are usually temporally secondary.
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The structure of common mental disorders.

TL;DR: The results suggest that comorbidity results from common, underlying core psychopathological processes, and argue for focusing research on these core processes themselves, rather than on their varied manifestations as separate disorders.
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Epidemiology of Major Depressive Disorder: Results From the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcoholism and Related Conditions

TL;DR: This large survey suggests a higher prevalence of major depressive disorder in the US population than large-sample estimates from the 1980s and 1990s and the shift in highest lifetime risk from young to middle-aged adults is an important transformation in the distribution of MDD.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Lifetime and 12-Month Prevalence of DSM-III-R Psychiatric Disorders in the United States: Results From the National Comorbidity Survey

TL;DR: The prevalence of psychiatric disorders is greater than previously thought to be the case, and morbidity is more highly concentrated than previously recognized in roughly one sixth of the population who have a history of three or more comorbid disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Posttraumatic stress disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey.

TL;DR: Progress in estimating age-at-onset distributions, cohort effects, and the conditional probabilities of PTSD from different types of trauma will require future epidemiologic studies to assess PTSD for all lifetime traumas rather than for only a small number of retrospectively reported "most serious" traumAs.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID). I: History, rationale, and description.

TL;DR: The history, rationale, and development of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID) is described, which is a semistructured interview for making the major Axis I DSM- III-R diagnoses.
Book

Manic-Depressive Illness

TL;DR: In this paper, psychodynamic features of families with multigenerational bipolar manic-depressive illness are described, including avoidance of affect, unrealistic standards of conformity, absence of intimate relationships apart from family, displaced parental low self-esteem, and fears related to illness heritability.
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