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Comorbidity, Prevalance and Trends. General Definition of Comorbidity  Historical Origins (Feinstein, 1970)  General Definition: Two or more physical.

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Presentation on theme: "Comorbidity, Prevalance and Trends. General Definition of Comorbidity  Historical Origins (Feinstein, 1970)  General Definition: Two or more physical."— Presentation transcript:

1 Comorbidity, Prevalance and Trends

2 General Definition of Comorbidity  Historical Origins (Feinstein, 1970)  General Definition: Two or more physical illnesses, psychological conditions or a mix of the two  Rule rather than the exception  Distinguish:  Covariation  Co-occurrence

3 Overview of the NCS, NCS- R  http://www.hcp.med.harvard.edu/ncs http://www.hcp.med.harvard.edu/ncs  National Comorbidity Survey (1990-1992), First nationally representative survey of mental disorders using research diagnostic interviews using DSM-III-R criteria  National Comorbidity Survey-Replication (2001-2003), N = 10,000, used DSM-IV criteria  Follow up on disorders from the first NCS and to explore particular questions in further depth

4 Rates of Comorbidity  Nearly half of all people with a mental disorder have two or more disorders  More than half of people with a substance use disorder and more than 75% of those within treatment for substance abuse or dependence als meet criteria for a mental disorder  Individuals frequently meet criteria for three or more disorders  Disorders may have indirect or direct causes— more on this later

5 Categorical Versus Dimensional  What do you gain with a categorical system?  What do you lose with a categorical system?  Are categories extreme ends of continuua or do they represent something qualitatively different?  Medical model versus operationalism

6 Examples of Taxa  Meehl http://www.tc.umn.edu/~pemeehl/  asserts that the following disorders may be true taxons  Schizophrenia  Bipolar depression  Unipolar major depression  Antisocial personality

7 Modeling Comorbidity  Bivariate Comorbidity  Multiformity Models  Causation Models  Independence Models  Spurious Associations  Hypothetical Multivariate Model

8 Dual Diagnosis: An application of Comorbidity  Berken’s Fallacy: Individuals with multiple disorders are more likely to seek treatment so that estimates of the prevalence of comorbid disorders will be higher in clinical samples  Inpatient vs Outpatient status  Chronicity of Illness  Severity of Illness

9 Methodological issues contd  Definitional issues vary from problem use of a substance to abuse or dependence  Which substances are included in the definition makes a difference  Disconnected areas of study

10 Effect of Comorbidity  Comorbidity affects a disorder’s course probnosis, assessment, treatment and outcome  Dual diagnosis: When a person meets criteria for one or more Axis I or Axis II mental disorders and meet criteria for one or more substance use disorders  Individuals with a lifetime history of a mental illness are 2.3 times more likely to have lifetime alcohol use disorder and 4.5 times more likely to have a substance use disorder

11 Disorders with Highest Comorbidities  ASP (84%)  Bipolar Disorder (61%)  Schizophrenia (47%)  Panic (36%)  OCD (33%)  MDD 927.2%)  Men and women with PTSD were 5 and 1.4 times more likely to have a drug use disorder than those without  Overall mental disorders yield at least double the risk of a lifetime alcohol or drug use disorder

12 Overall Rates of Multimorbidity  It is not uncommon for patients to have 3 or more disorders: 14% of the NCS sample had 3 or more diagnoses and these respondents accounted for almost 90% of the severe 12 month disorders and well over half of the lifetime and 12 month diagnoses in the sample.

13 Impact of Dual Diagnosis  How are patients affected?  Assessment issues

14 Underlying theories  Common Factors  Secondary Substance Abuse  Secondary Psychiatric Disorder  Bidirectional Models

15 Prevalence and Treatment of Disorders 1990-2003  No notable change in the prevalence or severity of mental disorder in the United States between 1990-1992 or between 2001-2003  Most treatment for disorders falls below the minimal standards of quality  Treatment typically brief (affects duration of particular disorder more than prevalence of mental disorder  Most treatment delivered in the medical sector for disorders below clinical threshold.


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