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Journal Article

Citation

Schneider B, Müller MJ, Philipp M. J. Affect. Disord. 2001; 65(3): 263-274.

Affiliation

Centre of Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy I, University of Frankfurt/Main, Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 10, D-60528 /Main, Frankfurt, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11511406

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To investigate the mortality rates in affective disorders due to unnatural and natural causes with respect to illness subtype and social-demographic features. METHODS: Mortality data were determined from a prospective study of 354 outpatients with affective disorders during a follow-up period of 5 years. Death from natural and unnatural causes was compared to sex- and age-specific expectations in the general population. Standardized mortality rates (SMR) in diagnostic subgroups and the influence of social-demographic features were investigated. RESULTS: The observed 30 deaths represented nearly three times (SMR, 2.9) the number expected on the basis of age- and sex-standardized reference population rates. Death from natural causes occurred with the same rate as expected (SMR, 1.0), death from unnatural causes was 28.8 times higher than expected. Women with affective disorders had a considerable high risk to die from unnatural causes (SMR, 47.1). A significant excess of unnatural death was found in all subtypes of affective disorders, particularly in recurrent major depressive episodes (SMR, 46.7). LIMITATIONS: The sample was restricted in size. Therefore subgroup differences and multiple relationships of risk factors could not be analyzed with high statistical power. CONCLUSIONS: The results corroborate earlier findings of excess mortality in major affective disorders and strengthen the view that suffering from recurrent major depression confers per se an important biological risk for suicide. Natural causes of death in affective disorders are comparable to expectations from reference populations. Social-demographic characteristics may contribute to an additional risk of premature death by suicide, particularly in women.


Language: en

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