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Population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: A 16-year population study

BACKGROUND: There are few if any life-span population-based studies of psychiatric disorder-associated biomedical and biophysical disorders and diseases (morbidity). AIM: To scope the present state of research regarding the biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated with affective and mental di...

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Autores principales: Cawthorpe, David R L, Cohen, Dan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10401504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37547734
http://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v13.i7.423
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author Cawthorpe, David R L
Cohen, Dan
author_facet Cawthorpe, David R L
Cohen, Dan
author_sort Cawthorpe, David R L
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: There are few if any life-span population-based studies of psychiatric disorder-associated biomedical and biophysical disorders and diseases (morbidity). AIM: To scope the present state of research regarding the biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated with affective and mental disorder in epidemiological samples, and to examine the life-span relationship between affective disorders and biomedical/biophysical disorders to illustrate a novel approach employing the odds ratio to represent the intensity of biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated in time in a population. METHODS: A repeatable systematic literature search of PubMed was represented in summary. Additionally, a regional population-based dataset was constructed and analyzed to represent the age- and sex-specific diagnoses (International Classification of Diseases Version 9, ICD-9) for those with and without affective disorder. The analysis presents a novel index of the relative age-specific frequency of life-span biomedical and biophysical diagnoses associated with affective disorder. RESULTS: The volume of biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated with mental disorder literature has increased, yet few studies measure comprehensive temporal hyper-morbidity (over-representation of diseases over time, either before or after the index diagnostic event) in populations. Further, there have been only a few population-based studies examining the morbidity associated with affective disorder and only one that examines the full diagnostic range of lifespan morbidity. Substantial differences arose between males and females with more females than males having greater frequencies of diagnoses. The age-specific distributions of the maximum proportional diagnosis frequency ratios for each sex illustrate the greatest diagnosis-specific differences when comparing the biomedical and biophysical diagnoses of those with and without affective disorder when the same diagnosis was represented in each grouping at the same age. CONCLUSION: Clinical research needs to focus on more than one or two comorbid biomedical or biophysical disorders at a time. Comprehensive population-based examination of the lifespan biomedical and biophysical multi-morbidity associated with affective disorder has the potential to directly inform clinical practice. Representing the proportional ratios of age-specific frequency of diagnoses for the full range of ICD-9 diagnoses is a novel analytical model. Diagnostic frequency appears a viable representation of a given disease state, such as affective disorder. Fortunately, the WPA has developed a global education section to better understand the biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated with all psychiatric disorders. This has been identified by the WPA as the psychiatric practice challenge of the 21(st) century.
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spelling pubmed-104015042023-08-05 Population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: A 16-year population study Cawthorpe, David R L Cohen, Dan World J Psychiatry Case Control Study BACKGROUND: There are few if any life-span population-based studies of psychiatric disorder-associated biomedical and biophysical disorders and diseases (morbidity). AIM: To scope the present state of research regarding the biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated with affective and mental disorder in epidemiological samples, and to examine the life-span relationship between affective disorders and biomedical/biophysical disorders to illustrate a novel approach employing the odds ratio to represent the intensity of biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated in time in a population. METHODS: A repeatable systematic literature search of PubMed was represented in summary. Additionally, a regional population-based dataset was constructed and analyzed to represent the age- and sex-specific diagnoses (International Classification of Diseases Version 9, ICD-9) for those with and without affective disorder. The analysis presents a novel index of the relative age-specific frequency of life-span biomedical and biophysical diagnoses associated with affective disorder. RESULTS: The volume of biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated with mental disorder literature has increased, yet few studies measure comprehensive temporal hyper-morbidity (over-representation of diseases over time, either before or after the index diagnostic event) in populations. Further, there have been only a few population-based studies examining the morbidity associated with affective disorder and only one that examines the full diagnostic range of lifespan morbidity. Substantial differences arose between males and females with more females than males having greater frequencies of diagnoses. The age-specific distributions of the maximum proportional diagnosis frequency ratios for each sex illustrate the greatest diagnosis-specific differences when comparing the biomedical and biophysical diagnoses of those with and without affective disorder when the same diagnosis was represented in each grouping at the same age. CONCLUSION: Clinical research needs to focus on more than one or two comorbid biomedical or biophysical disorders at a time. Comprehensive population-based examination of the lifespan biomedical and biophysical multi-morbidity associated with affective disorder has the potential to directly inform clinical practice. Representing the proportional ratios of age-specific frequency of diagnoses for the full range of ICD-9 diagnoses is a novel analytical model. Diagnostic frequency appears a viable representation of a given disease state, such as affective disorder. Fortunately, the WPA has developed a global education section to better understand the biomedical and biophysical morbidity associated with all psychiatric disorders. This has been identified by the WPA as the psychiatric practice challenge of the 21(st) century. Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2023-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10401504/ /pubmed/37547734 http://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v13.i7.423 Text en ©The Author(s) 2023. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is an open-access article that was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial.
spellingShingle Case Control Study
Cawthorpe, David R L
Cohen, Dan
Population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: A 16-year population study
title Population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: A 16-year population study
title_full Population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: A 16-year population study
title_fullStr Population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: A 16-year population study
title_full_unstemmed Population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: A 16-year population study
title_short Population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: A 16-year population study
title_sort population-based affective-disorder-related biomedical/biophysical multi-hyper-morbidity across the lifespan: a 16-year population study
topic Case Control Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10401504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37547734
http://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v13.i7.423
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