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精神疾病中的暴力和杀人行为。

Violence and homicidal behaviors in psychiatric disorders.

作者信息

Asnis G M, Kaplan M L, Hundorfean G, Saeed W

机构信息

Department of Psychiatry, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, USA.

出版信息

Psychiatr Clin North Am. 1997 Jun;20(2):405-25. doi: 10.1016/s0193-953x(05)70320-8.

Abstract

Our review evaluating the relationship between violent/homicidal behaviors and mental illness/psychiatric disorders used many different data including that assessing the prevalence of violent/homicidal behaviors in former psychiatric inpatients (just before hospitalization, during hospitalization, and after discharge) as outpatients and in community samples as well as evaluating the prevalence rate of psychiatric disorders in people who actually engaged in violent/homicidal disorders (jail detainees, prison inmates, and community samples). Irrespective of which line of investigation, there was convincing evidence that violent/ homicidal behavior was associated significantly with mental illness. Although earlier investigations failed to control for important variables, such as age and sociodemographics, most studies reviewed in this article did control for these items, further underlining the association of violence and mental illness. The question of whether specific psychiatric diagnostic categories are associated with violent/homicidal behavior is less definite across the various studies reviewed. The presence of substance abuse and dependence and alcohol abuse and dependence as well as antisocial personality disorder are particularly associated with an increased risk of violent/homicidal behaviors. The risk for these latter behaviors in schizophrenia, mood disorders, and anxiety disorders may appear somewhat greater than that for a general population but are not of the same magnitude of that for substance abuse or antisocial personality disorder. Interestingly, our outpatient study found that homicidal behaviors were not associated with any specific psychiatric diagnosis. Although understanding whether specific psychiatric diagnostic categories are more prone to violent behaviors may be of importance, most studies have been shortsighted regarding this evaluation. All the studies presented in this article except the ECA project, presented diagnostic data where either the presence of one psychiatric disorder did not preclude the diagnosis of another or assigned subjects/patients into the severest disorder of a predetermined hierarchy of diagnoses or only selected their principal/primary diagnosis. Thus, the effect of having a solitary psychiatric disorder (only one disorder present) as well as the effect of comorbidity per se on the relationship of psychiatric disorders and violent/homicidal behaviors were unexplored. Only the ECA study by Swanson and colleagues reported on the effect of comorbidity. As reviewed earlier in the article, Swanson et al found that comorbidity of psychiatric diagnostic categories further increased the risk of violent/ homicidal behaviors. In most cases, it was many more times than simply adding the rates of either diagnosis alone. Because more than 54% of respondents of the National Comorbidity Survey study who had one DSM-III-R diagnosis also had at least a second Axis I diagnosis, the association of violent/homicidal behaviors to mental illness may even be stronger than originally believed. Within the relationship of violent/homicidal behaviors and mental illness, this article suggests a number of particular risk factors. As just reviewed, substance/alcohol abuse and antisocial personality disorder as well as the presence of comorbid psychiatric disorders are significant risk factors. Which particular comorbid illness increases the risk still needs further elaboration. Studies must continue to try to define and understand the relationship of violent/homicidal behaviors in mental illness. Although mental disorders per se are significantly associated with violent/homicidal behaviors, it is reasonable to believe that targeting certain subgroups of patients should be helpful. Probably the presence of psychotic symptoms is a significant risk factor in violent/ homicidal behaviors in the mentally ill. Only one of the studies reviewed in this article evaluated this issue. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

摘要

我们评估暴力/杀人行为与精神疾病/精神障碍之间关系的综述使用了许多不同的数据,包括评估前精神科住院患者(住院前、住院期间和出院后)、门诊患者以及社区样本中暴力/杀人行为的患病率,同时还评估了实际实施暴力/杀人行为者(监狱被拘留者、监狱囚犯和社区样本)中精神障碍的患病率。无论采用哪种调查方式,都有令人信服的证据表明暴力/杀人行为与精神疾病显著相关。尽管早期的调查未能控制年龄和社会人口统计学等重要变量,但本文综述的大多数研究都对这些因素进行了控制,进一步强调了暴力与精神疾病之间的关联。在综述的各项研究中,特定精神科诊断类别是否与暴力/杀人行为相关的问题不太明确。药物滥用和依赖、酒精滥用和依赖以及反社会人格障碍与暴力/杀人行为风险增加尤其相关。精神分裂症、情绪障碍和焦虑障碍患者出现这些后期行为的风险可能比普通人群略高,但与药物滥用或反社会人格障碍的风险程度不同。有趣的是,我们的门诊研究发现杀人行为与任何特定的精神科诊断均无关联。虽然了解特定精神科诊断类别是否更容易出现暴力行为可能很重要,但大多数研究在这一评估方面都目光短浅。本文除ECA项目外呈现的所有研究,提供的诊断数据要么是一种精神障碍的存在并不排除另一种诊断,要么是将受试者/患者归入预定诊断等级中最严重的障碍,要么只是选择其主要/首要诊断。因此,单一精神障碍(仅存在一种障碍)的影响以及共病本身对精神障碍与暴力/杀人行为关系的影响尚未得到探讨。只有Swanson及其同事进行的ECA研究报告了共病的影响。如本文前面所述,Swanson等人发现精神科诊断类别的共病进一步增加了暴力/杀人行为的风险。在大多数情况下,其风险比仅简单相加任何一种诊断的发生率要高出许多倍。由于国家共病调查研究中超过54%有一项DSM-III-R诊断结果的受访者至少还有一项第一轴诊断,暴力/杀人行为与精神疾病之间的关联可能甚至比最初认为的更强。在暴力/杀人行为与精神疾病的关系中,本文提出了一些特定的风险因素。如前所述,药物/酒精滥用、反社会人格障碍以及共病精神障碍的存在是重要的风险因素。哪种特定的共病疾病会增加风险仍需进一步阐述。研究必须继续努力界定和理解精神疾病中暴力/杀人行为的关系。尽管精神障碍本身与暴力/杀人行为显著相关,但有理由认为针对某些患者亚组可能会有所帮助。精神病性症状的存在可能是精神病患者暴力/杀人行为的一个重要风险因素。本文综述的研究中只有一项评估了这个问题。

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