The lifetime prevalence of mental disorders: estimation, uses and limitations
- 1 May 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Psychological Medicine
- Vol. 10 (3), 429-435
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033291700047310
Abstract
SYNOPSIS The age-specific lifetime prevalence rate of a disease is the proportion of persons surviving to a given age who have experienced the disease at any time during their lives. This measure of morbidity has been used to report findings in many of the epidemiological surveys of mental disorders of the last 30 years. This paper presents a life-table method for estimating age-specific lifetime prevalence rates from incidence and mortality data. The method is applied to Monroe County, New York, case register data on the incidence of schizophrenia. Using this method, we estimate that at least 3% of the White population surviving to age 55 have experienced an episode of schizophrenia at some time during their lives. The difficulties of producing valid estimates of lifetime prevalence and the difficulties in interpreting differences reported in such rates make this morbidity measure of secondary importance to incidence and point-prevalence data.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Depression and Schizophrenia in Hospitalized Black and White Mental PatientsArchives of General Psychiatry, 1973
- Negroes and Whites and Rates of Mental Illness: Reconsideration of a MythPsychiatry: Interpersonal & Biological Processes, 1969
- The Mortality Experience of a Population with Psychiatric IllnessAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1969
- A Cumulative Register of Psychiatric Services in a CommunityAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1963
- A Discussion of the Concepts of Incidence and Prevalence as Related to Epidemiologic Studies of Mental DisordersAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1957