1985
DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.1985.01790240060006
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Mortality in a Follow-up of 500 Psychiatric Outpatients

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Cited by 224 publications
(108 citation statements)
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“…resentative community samples have generally 1969; Rorsman, 1974;Black et al 1985; Martin confirmed an increased mortality rate in persons et al 1985 and others), especially patients treated who had previously shown signs of mental for dementia (Jagger & Clarke, 1988;Jorm et al illness. Rorsman et al (1982) reported from the 1991) and patients treated for alcohol abuse Lundby study in Sweden a relative death rate or dependency have shown excess mortality from natural causes (death rate in mentally (Berglund, 1984;Martin et al 1985). The issue ill/death rate in standard population) of 1-5 of excess mortality in patients with a psychiatric among men and 1-2 among women with a background of mental disorder; they found no excess mortality among neurotics.…”
Section: Ilvt1mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…resentative community samples have generally 1969; Rorsman, 1974;Black et al 1985; Martin confirmed an increased mortality rate in persons et al 1985 and others), especially patients treated who had previously shown signs of mental for dementia (Jagger & Clarke, 1988;Jorm et al illness. Rorsman et al (1982) reported from the 1991) and patients treated for alcohol abuse Lundby study in Sweden a relative death rate or dependency have shown excess mortality from natural causes (death rate in mentally (Berglund, 1984;Martin et al 1985). The issue ill/death rate in standard population) of 1-5 of excess mortality in patients with a psychiatric among men and 1-2 among women with a background of mental disorder; they found no excess mortality among neurotics.…”
Section: Ilvt1mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The use of out-patient as well as in-patient data is important because it allows the inclusion of individuals with milder mental disorders who do not require admission to hospital, enabling more reliable and generalisable risk estimates. Most previous studies of this issue were based on either hospital discharge data 9,10 or smaller case-control 11 or communitybased [12][13][14][15] samples, and varied widely in adjustment for confounding. Our overall risk estimates were higher than the two-to fivefold increased risks of accidental death among psychiatric patients reported in those studies, possibly due to better ascertainment and reduced misclassification of mental disorders.…”
Section: Main Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous studies of this issue have had important limitations, including the use of only hospitalised psychiatric cases, 9,10 or small sample sizes in case-control 11 or other community-based [12][13][14][15][16] studies. We conducted the largest study of this issue to date using data for the entire adult population of Sweden (~6.9 million).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, there are other problems in securing unbiased estimates. Persons who develop schizophrenia, antisocial personality, substance use disorders (including alcoholism), and some neurotic types of disorder as well, tend to die young (e.g., Martin et al, 1985;Kendler, 1986), be hospitalized, imprisoned, and/or move residence frequently. Such persons are likely to be under-represented in the crosssectional samples of household members who are selected for study in most epidemiological research on psychiatric disorders in the general population.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%