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Temporal Stability of Diagnostic Criteria for Functional Psychoses
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1991
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NeuropsychologyPsychiatric EvaluationMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologyClinical PsychologyPsychiatryStability CoefficientDepressionRehabilitationFunctional PsychosesPsychiatric DisorderDiagnostic CriteriaPsychotic DisorderMood SpectrumSchizophreniaBiological PsychiatryMedicinePsychopathology
200 first admissions with functional psychoses were interviewed with PSE and rated simultaneously according to different diagnostic criteria (ICD-9, RDC, DSM-III, St. Louis, Taylor, Vienna Research Criteria). At follow-up 7 years later 186 patients could be traced and a course diagnosis was applied to each patient. Temporal stability of diagnostic criteria was calculated for ICD-9, RDC and DSM-III by stability coefficient and kappa values and was used as a criterion for validity. Schizophrenia and affective disorder display considerable stability over time, no matter whether one uses ICD-9, RDC or DSM-III. The data for schizoaffective disorder are less impressive, the stability coefficient is much higher for schizoaffective bipolar than for schizoaffective depressive patients.