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1.
Psychol Med ; 22(1): 131-45, 1992 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1574549

ABSTRACT

A five-year follow-up of the patients initially included in the International Pilot Study of Schizophrenia was conducted in eight of the nine centres. Adequate information was obtained for 807 patients, representing 76% of the initial cohort. Clinical and social outcomes were significantly better for patients in Agra and Ibadan than for those in the centres in developed countries. In Cali, only social outcome was significantly better.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Developing Countries , International Cooperation , Schizophrenia/rehabilitation , Schizophrenic Psychology , Activities of Daily Living/psychology , Adult , Bias , Cohort Studies , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales/statistics & numerical data , Psychometrics , Social Adjustment , Socioeconomic Factors
3.
Br J Psychiatry ; 156: 351-6, 1990 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2346833

ABSTRACT

A two-year follow-up was conducted of a subsample of the Chandigarh cohort of first-contact schizophrenic patients from the WHO Determinants of Outcome project. The patients were those living with family members who had been interviewed initially to determine their levels of expressed emotion (EE). The interview was repeated for 74% of the relatives at one-year follow-up. A dramatic reduction had occurred in each of the EE components and in the global index. No rural relative was rated as high EE at follow-up. Of the patients included in the one-year follow-up, 86% were followed for two years. In contrast to the one-year findings, the global EE index at initial interview did not predict relapse of schizophrenia over the subsequent two years. However, there was a significant association between initial hostility and subsequent relapse. The better outcome of this cohort of schizophrenic patients compared with samples from the West is partly attributable to tolerance and acceptance by family members.


Subject(s)
Emotions , Family , Schizophrenic Psychology , Attitude to Health , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Hostility , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Prognosis , Recurrence , Schizophrenia/rehabilitation
4.
Int J Addict ; 24(12): 1145-71, 1989 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2634032

ABSTRACT

In 1985 the Division of Mental Health, World Health Organization, Geneva, convened a group of investigators from centers in four countries--Australia, Chile, Norway, Swaziland--to participate in a pilot study on the efficacy of school-based alcohol education. The goal of the educational program was to delay onset and minimize involvement of alcohol use among 13- to 14-year-old adolescents. Twenty-five schools in the four countries, representing middle- and lower-class populations, were randomly assigned to peer-led education, teacher-led education, or a control condition. The educational program was derived from social-psychological theory and etiological research on adolescent alcohol use. The program focused on the social and environmental influences to drink alcohol and skills to resist those influences. It consisted of five lessons over 2 months. Baseline and posttest data measured alcohol use knowledge, attitudes, skills, and friends' drinking patterns. Data were collected immediately prior to and 2 months following the educational program. The data converge on the finding that peer-led education appears to be efficacious in reducing alcohol use across a variety of settings and cultures.


Subject(s)
Alcoholism/prevention & control , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Health Education/methods , Adolescent , Alcohol Drinking/psychology , Alcoholism/psychology , Australia , Behavior Therapy/methods , Chile , Eswatini , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Norway , Peer Group , Pilot Projects , Social Environment , Social Facilitation , World Health Organization
6.
Br J Psychiatry ; 151: 156-60, 1987 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3690103

ABSTRACT

A bilingual rater was trained in English in a technique of assessing relatives emotional attitudes to patients, and was then required to rate material in Hindi without any further experience. This strategy revealed that the rating of critical comments, hostility and positive remarks could be transferred from English to Hindi without distortion. There were problems with the remaining two scales, over-involvement and warmth, but these were due to technical issues connected with rating and not to cross-cultural distortion.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Emotions , Family Health , Family , Psychological Tests/methods , Schizophrenic Psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Humans , India , Middle Aged , Schizophrenic Language
7.
Br J Psychiatry ; 151: 160-5, 1987 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3690104

ABSTRACT

We measured the components of expressed emotion among two samples of relatives of first-contact patients from Aarhus (Denmark) and Chandigarh (India). The Danes were very similar in most respects to samples of British relatives, whereas the Indian relatives expressed significantly fewer critical comments, fewer positive remarks, and less over-involvement. Within the Chandigarh sample, city-dwellers were significantly more expressive than villagers of all EE components except over-involvement.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Emotions , Family Health , Family , Schizophrenic Psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Denmark , Female , Hostility , Humans , India , London , Male , Middle Aged
8.
Br J Psychiatry ; 151: 166-73, 1987 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3690105

ABSTRACT

We conducted a one-year follow-up of patients who had made a first contact with psychiatric services in Chandigarh, North India, and had been assigned a diagnosis of schizophrenia. The expressed emotion (EE) of the patients' relatives was assessed early on. We found the same associations between the individual components of EE and relapse of schizophrenia as in previous Anglo-American studies, but only the association between hostility and relapse was statistically significant. Applying the same criteria as in the Anglo-American studies for 'high EE', we found a significant relationship between high EE and relapse rates. We conclude that the significantly better outcome of Chandigarh first-contact patients compared with a London sample is largely due to the significantly lower proportion of high-EE relatives in the North Indian sample.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Emotions , Family Health , Family , Schizophrenic Psychology , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , India , Life Change Events , Prognosis , Recurrence , Schizophrenia/diagnosis
9.
Cult Med Psychiatry ; 11(2): 123-205, 1987 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3595169

ABSTRACT

This study reports on the findings from a WHO sponsored cross-national investigation of life events and schizophrenia. Data are presented from a series of 386 acutely ill schizophrenic patients selected from nine field research centers located in developing and developed countries (Aarhus, Denmark; Agra, India; Cali, Colombia; Chandigarh, India; Honolulu, USA; Ibadan, Nigeria; Nagasaki, Japan; Prague, Czechoslovakia; Rochester, USA). On a methodological level, the study demonstrates that life event methodologies originating in the developed countries can be adapted for international studies and may be used to collect reasonably reliable and comparable cross-cultural data on psychosocial factors affecting the course of schizophrenic disorders. Substantive findings replicate the results of prior studies which conclude that socioenvironmental stressors may precipitate schizophrenic attacks and such events tend to cluster in the two to three week period immediately preceding illness onset.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Life Change Events , Schizophrenia/etiology , Adolescent , Adult , Colombia , Czechoslovakia , Denmark , Developing Countries , Female , Humans , India , Japan , Male , Middle Aged , Nigeria , United States , World Health Organization
10.
Psychol Med ; 16(4): 909-28, 1986 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3493497

ABSTRACT

In a context of a WHO collaborative study, 12 research centres in 10 countries monitored geographically defined populations over 2 years to identify individuals making a first-in-lifetime contact with any type of 'helping agency' because of symptoms of psychotic illness. A total of 1379 persons who met specified inclusion criteria for schizophrenia and other related non-affective disorders were examined extensively, using standardized instruments, on entry into the study and on two consecutive follow-ups at annual intervals. Patients in different cultures, meeting the ICD and CATEGO criteria for schizophrenia, were remarkably similar in their symptom profiles and 49% of them presented the central schizophrenic conditions as defined by CATEGO class S+. However, the 2-year pattern of course was considerably more favourable in patients in developing countries compared with patients in developed countries, and the difference could not be fully explained by the higher frequency of acute onsets among the former. Age- and sex-specific incidence rates and estimates of disease expectancy were determined for a 'broad' diagnostic group of schizophrenic illness and for CATEGO S+ cases. While the former showed significant differences among the centres, the differences in the rates for S+ cases were non-significant or marginal. The results provide strong support for the notion that schizophrenic illnesses occur with comparable frequency in different populations and support earlier findings that the prognosis is better in less industrialized societies.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Referral and Consultation , Schizophrenia/diagnosis , Schizophrenic Psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Cross-Sectional Studies , Developing Countries , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Risk , Schizophrenia/epidemiology
16.
Acta Psychiatr Scand ; 63(4): 367-83, 1981 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7315484

ABSTRACT

The paper is a report on results obtained in the course of a multi-centre international study on depressive disorders in four countries, which was sponsored and co-ordinated by the World Health Organization. A screen form was developed and tested in order to select depressive patients among psychiatric in-patient and out-patient populations. The patients selected in this way were assessed clinically by experienced investigators using the WHO schedule for Standardized Assessment of Depressive Disorders (SADD). A total of 53 patients were evaluated in the five research centres, and the data were utilized in uni- and multivariate statistical analyses aiming to establish whether similar cases of depression could be found in different cultures, to describe their characteristics and to ascertain the extent to which diagnostic concepts and classification categories could be applied in different settings. The results point to a considerable degree of similarity in depressive symptomatology across the cultures if particular selection criteria are applied, and suggest that broad diagnostic groupings such as 'endogenous' and 'psychogenic' depressions could be used consistently by clinicians working in different cultures.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Depressive Disorder/diagnosis , Adult , Depressive Disorder/classification , Depressive Disorder/psychology , Female , Humans , Iran , Japan , Male , Quebec , Research Design , Switzerland , World Health Organization
17.
Psychol Med ; 10(4): 743-9, 1980 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7208732

ABSTRACT

In the context of an ongoing WHO research programme in depression, a total of 573 patients consulting psychiatrists in Canada, Iran, Japan and Switzerland were assessed with the WHO/SADD schedule which proved to be a simple and reliable instrument for standardized recording of clinical data. The results indicated that the "average" depressive patients seeking care in culturally different settings have many clinical features in common. A screening instrument, developed in the same study, has been shown to be effective in selecting depressive patients among in- and out-patient populations.


Subject(s)
Depressive Disorder/diagnosis , Psychological Tests , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Humans , International Cooperation , Iran , Japan , Mass Screening/methods , Quebec , Switzerland , World Health Organization
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