Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Definition and prevalence of severe and persistent mental illness

2000; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 177; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1192/bjp.177.2.149

ISSN

1472-1465

Autores

Mirella Ruggeri, Morven Leese, Graham Thornicroft, Giulia Bisoffi, Michele Tansella,

Tópico(s)

Functional Brain Connectivity Studies

Resumo

Background There is little consistency in how severe mental illness (SMI) is defined in practice, and no operational definitions. Aims To test two operationalised definitions, based on the National Institute of Mental Health (1987) definition: the first uses three criteria (diagnosis of psychosis; duration of service contact ≥ 2 years; GAF score ≤ 50), the second only the last two. Method Annual prevalence rates of SMI in two European catchment areas for each criterion and the criteria combined were calculated. Results The first definition produced rates of 2.55 and 1.34/1000 in London and Verona, respectively; the second permitted an additional 0.98/1000 non-psychotic disorders to be included in Verona. Conclusions The three-dimensional definition selects a small group of patients with SMI who have psychotic disorders. The two-dimensional approach allows estimates of SMI prevalence rates which include all forms of mental disorder.

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