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Do life events trigger mental
disorders?
Reported November 12, 2007
A new epidemiological study performed in Italy addresses
an old question in the current issue of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics.
Although life events have been consistently reported as precipitating
factors for most psychiatric disorders, there is no comprehensive
investigation of the relationship between severe life events and psychiatric
disorders in the general population.
This is a community-based study of psychiatric disorders among a cohort
representative of adults in an Italian town. A total of 2,363 subjects out
of 2,500 selected to be representative of the population living in Sesto
Fiorentino, central Italy, were interviewed by their own general
practitioner using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview.
Of the 613 subjects, 609 who resulted positive for any psychiatric disorders
and 123 out of a random sample of 130 negatives were re-interviewed by the
psychiatrists using the Florence Psychiatric Interview.
The Florence Psychiatric Interview was used to explore each distinct
psychiatric episode. Life events were recorded in detail by a specific
interview.
During the year prior to the onset of the first psychiatric disorder, 35.8%
of cases suffered from at least a severe event, compared with 12.2% of
non-cases during a comparable period (OR = 4.0, 95% CI = 2.3-7.1).
The excess of life events occurred for almost all the diagnostic categories.
The same results were reproduced even when only the 'independent' life
events were considered.
The distribution of the events through the 12 months taken into account
showed an even distribution of events among non-cases, whereas there was a
clear accumulation in the last 3 months prior to the onset of the pathology
in the cases.
Life stress is one of the main precipitating factors of psychopathology.
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