Merikangas K R, Bromet E J, Spiker D G
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1983 Jul;40(7):795-800. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.1983.01790060093012.
Fifty-six married inpatients with primary affective disorders and their spouses participated in a 12- to 36-month follow-up study in which the relationship of assortative mating to social adjustment and course of illness was examined. At follow-up, the patients who were concordant with their spouses for psychiatric illness had poorer social adjustment than the group of patients with well spouses. This finding was confirmed by both relatives' ratings and clinicians' ratings of the patients' social adjustment. Measures of relapse since the target hospitalization and self-rated symptoms at the time of follow-up were not different for the two groups. The divorce rate, however, was significantly greater for the couples who were concordant for psychiatric illness when compared with the discordant couples.
56名患有原发性情感障碍的已婚住院患者及其配偶参与了一项为期12至36个月的随访研究,该研究考察了选型交配与社会适应及病程之间的关系。随访时,与配偶精神疾病一致的患者比配偶健康的患者组社会适应能力更差。亲属对患者社会适应能力的评分和临床医生的评分均证实了这一发现。两组自目标住院以来的复发率及随访时的自评症状并无差异。然而,与精神疾病不一致的夫妻相比,精神疾病一致的夫妻离婚率显著更高。