Prevalence of psychiatric illness in primary caretakers of childhood-onset schizophrenia subjects

Jonathan Kusumi (Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, CO;) (Department of Psychiatry, Denver Health, Denver, CO, USA)
Randal G. Ross (Department of Psychiatry, Denver Health, Denver, CO, USA)

Mental Illness

ISSN: 2036-7465

Article publication date: 26 July 2012

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Abstract

Childhood-onset schizophrenia (COS) refers to schizophrenia with onset of psychotic symptoms prior to a child's 13th birthday. Optimal treatment likely includes family-based services supplementing antipsychotic pharmacotherapy. However, family-based services can require adjustment based on parental psychopathology; there has been little literature exploring the frequency or type of psychopathology seen in parents of COS cases. This report includes the results of a structured psychiatric evaluation on 80 parents of a COS case with comparison to a sample of 304 parents. Having a child with psychosis and being of minority racial/ethnicity status increased risk for psychiatric illness. Psychotic disorders (15% vs. 5%), mood disorders (54% vs. 27%), anxiety disorders (30% vs. 18%), and substance use disorders (49% vs. 31%) were all increased in the parents with a psychotic child. Psychiatric illness is common in parents of a child with COS and will need to be considered as family-based services for COS are developed.

Keywords

Citation

Kusumi, J. and Ross, R.G. (2012), "Prevalence of psychiatric illness in primary caretakers of childhood-onset schizophrenia subjects", Mental Illness, Vol. 4 No. 2, pp. 115-119. https://doi.org/10.4081/mi.2012.e22

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2012 J.Kusumi and R.G. Ross

License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (by-nc 3.0).


Corresponding author

Randy Ross, University of Colorado Denver, 13001 E 17th Pl, Mailstop F546, Aurora, CO, 80045, USA.

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