Day R, Nielsen J A, Korten A, Ernberg G, Dube K C, Gebhart J, Jablensky A, Leon C, Marsella A, Olatawura M
Cult Med Psychiatry. 1987 Jun;11(2):123-205. doi: 10.1007/BF00122563.
This study reports on the findings from a WHO sponsored cross-national investigation of life events and schizophrenia. Data are presented from a series of 386 acutely ill schizophrenic patients selected from nine field research centers located in developing and developed countries (Aarhus, Denmark; Agra, India; Cali, Colombia; Chandigarh, India; Honolulu, USA; Ibadan, Nigeria; Nagasaki, Japan; Prague, Czechoslovakia; Rochester, USA). On a methodological level, the study demonstrates that life event methodologies originating in the developed countries can be adapted for international studies and may be used to collect reasonably reliable and comparable cross-cultural data on psychosocial factors affecting the course of schizophrenic disorders. Substantive findings replicate the results of prior studies which conclude that socioenvironmental stressors may precipitate schizophrenic attacks and such events tend to cluster in the two to three week period immediately preceding illness onset.
本研究报告了世界卫生组织发起的一项关于生活事件与精神分裂症的跨国调查结果。数据来自从位于发展中国家和发达国家的9个实地研究中心选取的386例急性精神分裂症患者(丹麦奥胡斯;印度阿格拉;哥伦比亚卡利;印度昌迪加尔;美国檀香山;尼日利亚伊巴丹;日本长崎;捷克斯洛伐克布拉格;美国罗切斯特)。在方法层面,该研究表明源自发达国家的生活事件研究方法可适用于国际研究,并可用于收集关于影响精神分裂症病程的社会心理因素的相当可靠且可比的跨文化数据。实质性研究结果重复了先前研究的结果,这些研究得出结论,社会环境压力源可能引发精神分裂症发作,且此类事件往往集中在疾病发作前的两到三周内。