TY - JOUR
T1 - The Influence of Life Events on the Subsequent Course of Psychotic Illness A Prospective Follow-Up of the Camberwell Collaborative Psychosis Study
AU - Van Os, J.
AU - Fahy, T. A.
AU - Bebbington, P.
AU - Jones, P.
AU - Wilkins, S.
AU - Sham, P.
AU - Russell, A.
AU - Gilvarry, K.
AU - Lewis, S.
AU - Toone, B.
AU - Murray, R.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Hayes Grove Priory Hospital for financial support.
PY - 1994/5
Y1 - 1994/5
N2 - Fifty-nine psychotic patients with acute onset of illness, who had been interviewed about their experience of stressful life events before the episode, were followed up for an average of 42 months. Thirty patients (51%) had experienced a stressful life event in the 3 months immediately before onset (EV +), 29 had not (EV —). In patients with an RDC diagnosis of affective disorder or unspecified functional psychosis, the presence of stressful life events was associated subsequently with milder symptom severity, less time spent in hospital, more treatment for depressive symptoms and less for psychotic symptoms. In schizophrenia, differences were less apparent, but patients with event associated episodes had less need of anti-psychotic maintenance medication over the follow-up period and tended to have spent more time in complete remission. EV + schizophrenic subjects also had higher morbid risk for schizophrenia in their first degree relatives, and tended to be female and to have less typical symptoms than EV— schizophrenic patients.
AB - Fifty-nine psychotic patients with acute onset of illness, who had been interviewed about their experience of stressful life events before the episode, were followed up for an average of 42 months. Thirty patients (51%) had experienced a stressful life event in the 3 months immediately before onset (EV +), 29 had not (EV —). In patients with an RDC diagnosis of affective disorder or unspecified functional psychosis, the presence of stressful life events was associated subsequently with milder symptom severity, less time spent in hospital, more treatment for depressive symptoms and less for psychotic symptoms. In schizophrenia, differences were less apparent, but patients with event associated episodes had less need of anti-psychotic maintenance medication over the follow-up period and tended to have spent more time in complete remission. EV + schizophrenic subjects also had higher morbid risk for schizophrenia in their first degree relatives, and tended to be female and to have less typical symptoms than EV— schizophrenic patients.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0028244379&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S003329170002746X
DO - 10.1017/S003329170002746X
M3 - Article
C2 - 8084944
AN - SCOPUS:0028244379
SN - 0033-2917
VL - 24
SP - 503
EP - 513
JO - Psychological medicine
JF - Psychological medicine
IS - 2
ER -