Patel Vikram, Cohen Alex, Thara Rangaswamy, Gureje Oye
Braz J Psychiatry. 2006 Jun;28(2):149-52. doi: 10.1590/s1516-44462006000200014. Epub 2006 Jun 26.
That schizophrenia has a better prognosis in non-industrialized societies has become an axiom in international psychiatry; the evidence most often cited comes from three World Health Organization (WHO) cross-national studies. Although a host of socio-cultural factors have been considered as contributing to variation in the course of schizophrenia in different settings, we have little evidence from low-income countries that clearly demonstrates the beneficial influence of these variables. In this article, we suggest that the finding of better outcomes in developing countries needs re-examination for five reasons: methodological limitations of the World Health Organization studies; the lack of evidence on the specific socio-cultural factors which apparently contribute to the better outcomes; increasing anecdotal evidence describing the abuse of basic human rights of people with schizophrenia in developing countries; new evidence from cohorts in developing countries depicting a much gloomier picture than originally believed; and, rapid social and economic changes are undermining family care systems for people with schizophrenia in developing countries. We argue that the study of the long-term course of this mental disorder in developing countries is a major research question and believe it is time to thoroughly and systematically explore cross-cultural variation in the course and outcome of schizophrenia.
精神分裂症在非工业化社会有较好的预后,这已成为国际精神病学中的一个公理;最常被引用的证据来自世界卫生组织(WHO)的三项跨国研究。尽管许多社会文化因素被认为是导致精神分裂症在不同环境中病程差异的原因,但我们从低收入国家几乎没有得到明确证明这些变量具有有益影响的证据。在本文中,我们认为发展中国家有更好预后这一发现需要重新审视,原因有五点:世界卫生组织研究的方法局限性;缺乏关于显然促成更好预后的具体社会文化因素的证据;越来越多的轶事证据描述了发展中国家精神分裂症患者基本人权受到侵犯的情况;来自发展中国家队列的新证据描绘了一幅比最初认为的要暗淡得多的图景;以及,快速的社会和经济变化正在破坏发展中国家精神分裂症患者的家庭护理系统。我们认为,研究发展中国家这种精神障碍的长期病程是一个重大研究问题,并认为现在是彻底且系统地探索精神分裂症病程和预后的跨文化差异的时候了。