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Journal Article

Citation

Scott H, Johnson S, Menezes P, Thornicroft G, Marshall J, Bindman J, Bebbington P, Kuipers E. Br. J. Psychiatry 1998; 172: 345-350.

Affiliation

Maudsley Continuing Care Study, Institute of Psychiatry, London.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Royal College of Psychiatry)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9715338

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to investigate whether 'dual diagnosis' (substance misuse and severe mental illness) is associated with aggression and offending. METHOD: Twenty-seven people meeting the criteria for both psychotic illness and a substance use disorder and 65 people with psychosis only were interviewed. Case notes were also examined and keyworkers asked to rate substance misuse and aggression. RESULTS: The severity of aggression and offending among this community treatment sample was low. Individuals with a dual diagnosis were significantly more likely than those with psychosis only to report any history of committing an offence (P = 0.001), or recent hostile behaviour (P = 0.001). Keyworkers were more likely to report recent aggression among the dually diagnosed (P = 0.01). Significant differences persisted when we used logistic regression to control for potentially confounding demographic and clinical variables. CONCLUSIONS: Dual diagnosis may be an important factor in aggression and offending among severely mentally ill individuals in inner-city areas. Accurate risk assessment requires examination of substance use.


Language: en

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