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‘The problem of validity in field studies of psychological disorders’revisited1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2009

Bruce P. Dohrenwend*
Affiliation:
New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University, New York, USA
*
2Address for correspondence: Dr B. P. Dohrenwend, NY State Psychiatric Institute, 722 West 168th Street, Box 8, New York, NY 10032, USA.

Synopsis

Since the turn of the century and up to about 1980, there have been two generations of epidemiological studies of the true prevalence of psychiatric disorders: a pre-World War II first generation and a post-World War II second generation. With the appearance of DSM-III in 1980 and the changes in epidemiological proceducres coincident with it, it has become meaningful in the US to talk about the beginnings of a new, third generation or studies in psychiatric epidemiology. The purposes of this paper are: first, to briefly summarize the problems of validity with the procedures for case identification and diagnosis in the first-and second-generation studies; second, to consider some of the newer developments with regard to diagnostic instruments that either are or should be influencing third-generation studies; third, to discuss some of the problems of validity in the handful of third-generation studies done so far; and fourth, to describe and illustrate an approach that seems to make sense in the context of gaps in knowledge of aetiology and pathogenesis that leave us still dependent on interviews for case identification and classification.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

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Footnotes

1

This paper was presented at the 1988 Annual Meeting of the American Psychopathological Association and is published in The Validity of Psychiatric Diagnosis (ed. L. N. Robins and J. E. Barrett), American Psychopathological Association Serices, Raven Press and includes some updating of the account of the epidemiological study in lsrael.

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