Goldstein 1988 Flashcards
1
Q
BACK GROUND QUESTION
A
- ‘Do schizophrenic women have a less severe experience than schizophrenic men’
2
Q
AIMS
A
- To see if there are gender differences with regard to the re-hospitalisation of people with schizophrenia and to the length of their hospital stays
- To consider social factors
- To look at DSM II and DSM III diagnosis to see if there were differences and to test the DSM for reliability and validity.
3
Q
PROCEDURE/SAMPLE
A
- Used DSM III to test for gender differences in schizophrenia
- 199 patients who were male and females
- all were re-diagnosed later with the newer version of DSM III 10 years.
- Patients were aged between 18 and 45
4
Q
PROCEDURE/SAMPLE - Re-diganosis to test the DSM for reliability
A
- Patients were re-diagnosed using the DSM III.
- Hospital records gave detailed histories for the re-diganosis and single blind technique was used, where the psychiatrist was blind to the hypothesis.
- Goldstein carried out re-diagnosis and she was not blind to the hypothesis, two other experts carried out the re-diagnosis of a random sample of patients (4 men and 4 women achieved 0.80 agreement)
- out of the 199 patients who had various forms of schizophrenia according to DSM II, 169 met the criteria of the DSM II
5
Q
PROCEDURE/SAMPLE 2
A
- 90 (58 men and 32 women)
- men aged 24
- High levels of education
- 87 were non-hispanic white and middle class
- Had many types of schizophrenia
- Goldstein gathered information about symptoms, functioning before diagnosis and course of illness using questionaires and interviews.
6
Q
PROCEDURE - SYMPTOMS
A
- Symptoms were rated by trained master - levels interviewers using an instrument
- Areas covered - hallucinations, paranoia, anxiety etc
- assume Goldstein used trained interviewers and structured interviewers
7
Q
PROCEDURE - PREMORBID FUNCTIONING
A
- Measured by questionaires dealing with isolation, occupational status, peer ratings and interests.
8
Q
PROCEDURE - COURSE OF ILLNESS
A
- Operationalised by the number of re-hospitalisations and lengths of stay in hospital with data being obtained over a 10 year period.
- Data was obtained from the New York State Department of Mental Health
9
Q
RESULTS
A
- It was found men had a higher mean number of re-hospitalisations and longer stays in hospitals over a 10 year period.
- Schizophrenia women had a significantly lower mean number of re-hospitalisations and shorter stay from 1973-1983
10
Q
CONCLUSIONS
A
- Females with schizophrenia experienced fewer re-hospitalisations and shorter lengths of stays than males
- Gender differences started early in the disorder
- males have a poorer outcome than females