Fichter M M, Koniarczyk M, Greifenhagen A, Koegel P, Quadflieg N, Wittchen H U, Wölz J
Department of Psychiatry, Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich, Germany.
Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci. 1996;246(4):185-96. doi: 10.1007/BF02188952.
The aim of the study was to reliably assess the 6-month and lifetime prevalence of mental illness according to DSM-III criteria in a representative sample of homeless individuals in the city of Munich, Germany. Because the characteristics of the homeless population were unknown, we first conducted a pre-sampling survey to determine a proportionate allocation of the main interviews in three nested sampling strata. For the pre-sampling we approached 300 males, who appeared to be homeless, for a brief interview; of these, 271 were homeless according to our definition and were allocated to one of three sectors ("shelter", "meal services", "outdoor"). Thereafter, we randomly sampled homeless males in these three strata until the indicated allocations were met. The Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS) was used for diagnostic classification according to DSM-III in the main interview. Results from this representative urban sample show that the mean age of the homeless males was 43 years; most were unmarried or divorced, had a relatively low level of school education and a long duration of homelessness. Based on the main interviews with 146 homeless males the following lifetime prevalence rates were obtained: 91.8% for substance use disorder (82.9% alcohol dependence), 41.8% for affective disorders, 22.6% for anxiety disorders and 12.4% for schizophrenia. Of the homeless males in Munich, 94.5% had at least one DIS/DSM-III axis I diagnosis. Six-month prevalence data is also presented. Results are compared with those of a very similar study on homeless individuals in Los Angeles, which also used DIS/DSM-III diagnoses. In comparison with representative community samples in the United States and in Germany, mental illness was much more frequent among homeless individuals in Munich as well as in Los Angeles. Implications for health care planning are discussed.
该研究的目的是依据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第三版(DSM - III)标准,对德国慕尼黑市具有代表性的无家可归者样本进行精神疾病6个月患病率及终生患病率的可靠评估。由于无家可归人群的特征未知,我们首先进行了一次预抽样调查,以确定在三个嵌套抽样层次中主要访谈的比例分配。对于预抽样,我们接触了300名看似无家可归的男性进行简短访谈;其中,根据我们的定义有271人无家可归,并被分配到三个区域之一(“收容所”、“餐饮服务”、“户外”)。此后,我们在这三个层次中对无家可归男性进行随机抽样,直至达到指定的分配数量。在主要访谈中,使用诊断访谈表(DIS)依据DSM - III进行诊断分类。这个具有代表性的城市样本的结果显示,无家可归男性的平均年龄为43岁;大多数人未婚或离异,受教育程度相对较低且无家可归的时间较长。基于对146名无家可归男性的主要访谈,得出以下终生患病率:物质使用障碍为91.8%(酒精依赖为82.9%),情感障碍为41.8%,焦虑障碍为22.6%,精神分裂症为12.4%。慕尼黑的无家可归男性中,94.5%至少有一项DIS/DSM - III轴I诊断。还呈现了6个月患病率数据。研究结果与另一项针对洛杉矶无家可归者的极为相似的研究(该研究也使用DIS/DSM - III诊断)进行了比较。与美国和德国具有代表性的社区样本相比,慕尼黑和洛杉矶的无家可归者中精神疾病更为常见。文中讨论了对医疗保健规划的影响。