住院饮食失调人群的合并症:临床特征和治疗意义。

The Psychiatric hospital Pub Date : 1993-12-01
K J Zerbe, S R Marsh, L Coyne
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文介绍了1983年11月至1989年6月在堪萨斯州托皮卡C.F. Menninger纪念医院治疗的96例患者的临床特征。他们的第一轴饮食失调诊断如下:53人被诊断为贪食症;神经性厌食症21例;2人同时患有这两种诊断;17人患有非典型失调或饮食失调症;2人被诊断为影响身体状况的心理因素。73%的队列被发现有I轴或II轴疾病,或两者兼有,共病。46%的样本中发现了边缘性人格障碍,尽管20%的边缘性人格障碍患者是回顾性诊断的。抑郁症是I轴诊断中最大的合并症。患者变量的性虐待,药物和酒精成瘾,净化行为和人际关系也进行了描述。作者得出结论,大量饮食失调患者与其他精神疾病有明显的合并症。这种高发病率的合并症可能有助于解释许多进食障碍患者的难治性频率,他们对门诊或短期住院治疗无效。作者建议进一步的研究来解决共病饮食失调患者的问题,并建议临床医生和付款人考虑这些发现。
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Comorbidity in an inpatient eating disordered population: clinical characteristics and treatment implications.

Data are presented that describe the clinical characteristics of 96 patients treated at the C.F. Menninger Memorial Hospital, Topeka, Kansas, from November 1983 to June 1989. Their Axis I eating disorder diagnoses were as follows: 53 had diagnoses of bulimia; 21 had anorexia nervosa; 2 had both diagnoses; 17 had atypical disorders or eating disorders not otherwise specified; and 2 had a diagnosis of psychological factors affecting physical conditions. Seventy-three percent of the cohort were found to have either Axis I or Axis II disorders or both, comorbidity. Borderline personality disorder was found in 46% of the sample, although 20% of the patients with borderline disorders were diagnosed retrospectively. Depression was the largest comorbid Axis I diagnosis. Patient variables for sexual abuse, drug and alcohol addiction, purgative behaviors, and interpersonal relationships are also described. The authors conclude that a substantial subpopulation of eating disordered patients are significantly comorbid for other psychiatric illnesses. This high incidence of comorbidity may help explain the frequency of refractoriness of many eating disordered patients who do not respond to outpatient or short-term inpatient hospitalization. The authors recommend that additional research studies address the problems of the comorbid eating disordered patient and suggest that the findings be taken into account by clinicians and payers.

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Strategic implications of healthcare reform for mental health providers. Comorbidity in an inpatient eating disordered population: clinical characteristics and treatment implications. Dramatic changes in care: the experience of one psychiatric hospital. Treatment outcome and continuous quality improvement: two aspects of program evaluation. The sibling group: beginning to meet the needs of child siblings of psychiatrically hospitalized children.
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