The Lundby Study is a prospective cohort study, which has followed a Swedish unselected community sample between 1 July 1947 and 1 July 1997. The aim was to study the risks of mental morbidity and different DSM-IV disorders in subjects with intellectual disability (ID) in the Lundby cohort between 1 July 1947 to 30 June 1997. The diagnosis of ID was re-evaluated according to DSM-IV in subjects who had been considered to have ID between 1947 and 1997. Multiple sources of information were used to obtain best estimate consensus diagnoses of mental disorders. The relative risk of mental disorder was 1.34 in subjects with ID as compared with the reference group. Dual diagnosis was more prevalent in mild ID than in moderate ID. No subject with severe ID was diagnosed with mental disorder. The cumulative incidence of any mental disorder in subjects with ID was 44\%. The most common DSM-IV diagnoses were: Mood Disorders (11.5\%), Anxiety Disorders (11.5\%), Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders (8\%), Mental Disorder NOS Due to a General Medical Condition (8\%), Dementia (3.8\%) and Alcohol Abuse (1.9\%). Mental disorders were more common in subjects with ID than in the reference group.
%0 Journal Article
%1 nettelbladt_risk_2009
%A Nettelbladt, Per
%A Göth, Maria
%A Bogren, Mats
%A Mattisson, Cecilia
%D 2009
%J Nordic Journal of Psychiatry
%K 80 Adult, Aged, Anxiety Cohort Comorbidity, Dementia, Diagnosis, Diagnostic Disorders, Dual Female, Humans, Longitudinal Male, Manual Mental Middle Mood Personality Prospective Psychotic Retardation, Risk, Schizophrenia, Statistical Studies, Sweden and of over, {(Psychiatry),}
%N 4
%P 316--321
%R 10.1080/08039480902759192
%T Risk of mental disorders in subjects with intellectual disability in the Lundby cohort 1947-97
%U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19229734
%V 63
%X The Lundby Study is a prospective cohort study, which has followed a Swedish unselected community sample between 1 July 1947 and 1 July 1997. The aim was to study the risks of mental morbidity and different DSM-IV disorders in subjects with intellectual disability (ID) in the Lundby cohort between 1 July 1947 to 30 June 1997. The diagnosis of ID was re-evaluated according to DSM-IV in subjects who had been considered to have ID between 1947 and 1997. Multiple sources of information were used to obtain best estimate consensus diagnoses of mental disorders. The relative risk of mental disorder was 1.34 in subjects with ID as compared with the reference group. Dual diagnosis was more prevalent in mild ID than in moderate ID. No subject with severe ID was diagnosed with mental disorder. The cumulative incidence of any mental disorder in subjects with ID was 44\%. The most common DSM-IV diagnoses were: Mood Disorders (11.5\%), Anxiety Disorders (11.5\%), Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders (8\%), Mental Disorder NOS Due to a General Medical Condition (8\%), Dementia (3.8\%) and Alcohol Abuse (1.9\%). Mental disorders were more common in subjects with ID than in the reference group.
@article{nettelbladt_risk_2009,
abstract = {The Lundby Study is a prospective cohort study, which has followed a Swedish unselected community sample between 1 July 1947 and 1 July 1997. The aim was to study the risks of mental morbidity and different {DSM-IV} disorders in subjects with intellectual disability {(ID)} in the Lundby cohort between 1 July 1947 to 30 June 1997. The diagnosis of {ID} was re-evaluated according to {DSM-IV} in subjects who had been considered to have {ID} between 1947 and 1997. Multiple sources of information were used to obtain best estimate consensus diagnoses of mental disorders. The relative risk of mental disorder was 1.34 in subjects with {ID} as compared with the reference group. Dual diagnosis was more prevalent in mild {ID} than in moderate {ID.} No subject with severe {ID} was diagnosed with mental disorder. The cumulative incidence of any mental disorder in subjects with {ID} was 44\%. The most common {DSM-IV} diagnoses were: Mood Disorders (11.5\%), Anxiety Disorders (11.5\%), Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders (8\%), Mental Disorder {NOS} Due to a General Medical Condition (8\%), Dementia (3.8\%) and Alcohol Abuse (1.9\%). Mental disorders were more common in subjects with {ID} than in the reference group.},
added-at = {2011-03-11T10:05:34.000+0100},
author = {Nettelbladt, Per and Göth, Maria and Bogren, Mats and Mattisson, Cecilia},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/26b13dcfea12672cd1354fec991353a52/jelias},
doi = {10.1080/08039480902759192},
interhash = {b7ed3c5f2b82094b0942f6e98418696a},
intrahash = {6b13dcfea12672cd1354fec991353a52},
issn = {1502-4725},
journal = {Nordic Journal of Psychiatry},
keywords = {80 Adult, Aged, Anxiety Cohort Comorbidity, Dementia, Diagnosis, Diagnostic Disorders, Dual Female, Humans, Longitudinal Male, Manual Mental Middle Mood Personality Prospective Psychotic Retardation, Risk, Schizophrenia, Statistical Studies, Sweden and of over, {(Psychiatry),}},
note = {{PMID:} 19229734},
number = 4,
pages = {316--321},
timestamp = {2011-03-11T10:06:03.000+0100},
title = {Risk of mental disorders in subjects with intellectual disability in the Lundby cohort 1947-97},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19229734},
volume = 63,
year = 2009
}