A follow-up study of early onset psychosis: Comparison between outcome diagnoses of schizophrenia,mood disorders,and personality disorders |
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Authors: | Jon M McClellan John S Werry Mark Ham |
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Institution: | (1) University of Auckland, Auckland;(2) The Human Development Center, Duluth, Minnesota;(3) Department of Psychiatry, RP-10, University of Washington, 98109 Seattle, Washington |
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Abstract: | This study examined the outcome of youth previously diagnosed with psychotic disorders at a public-sector tertiary care hospital. Of 95 children and adolescents retrospectively identified, follow-up information (mean interval 3.9 years) was obtained on 24 subjects with an outcome diagnosis of schizophrenia, 9 with psychotic mood disorders, 5 with personality disorders (antisocial or borderline), and 1 with schizo-affective disorder. The schizophrenic group was more often odd premorbidly and functioned worse at outcome, while the mood-disordered group had a shorter follow-up period and was more often anxious or dysthymic premorbidly. The personality-disordered group resembled the schizophrenics in their degree of impairment and chronicity. All three groups had high rates of family disruption, low SES, substance abuse, and chronicity, and were similar in their degree of premorbid impairment, length of prodrome, age of onset, initial diagnosis, and family psychiatric history. Misdiagnosis at onset was quite common and highlights the need for systematic longitudinal assessment of early onset psychotic disorders.This study was funded in part by a grant from the Washington Institute for Research and Training. |
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