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Comorbidity within mental disorders


Comorbidity within mental disorders: a comprehensive analysis ...

Comorbidity within mental disorders: a comprehensive analysis based on 145 990 survey respondents from 27 countries

Comorbidity within mental disorders: a comprehensive analysis ...

Survey data from a range of sites confirms that comorbidity between mental disorders is common. Understanding the risks of temporally ...

Mental Health Comorbidities - News-Medical

A large meta-analysis showed that four mental disorders, namely, anxiety, depression, bipolar disorders, and schizophrenia, are linked to as ...

Comorbidities in Mental Health - Verywell Mind

Mental health conditions that tend to show comorbidity include eating disorders, anxiety disorders, and substance abuse.

Comorbidity | Psychology Today

Many different mental health disorders can co-occur. One common example is depression and anxiety. However, some researchers argue that the two ...

Exploring Comorbidity Within Mental Disorders Among a Danish ...

This population-based cohort study of 5 940 778 individuals, followed up for 83.9 million person-years, found that comorbidity within mental disorders was ...

Co-morbidities of mental disorders and chronic physical diseases in ...

The pooled prevalence of mental disorders in patients with chronic physical diseases was 36.6% (95% CI, 31.4–42.1) and the pooled odds ratio was 3.1 (95% CI, 1 ...

Comorbidity: What is it, examples and more - Top Doctors

When comorbidities are related to mental health, it's when there are mental and physical disorders within the same person. This is despite the chronological ...

Comorbidity - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

In psychiatry, comorbidity is generally taken to mean the association of diagnosable psychiatric disorders. Comorbidity is an epidemiologic phenomenon, relating ...

A shared neural basis underlying psychiatric comorbidity - Nature

The high prevalence of comorbid mental disorders suggests shared neurobiological origins among ... Exploring comorbidity within mental disorders ...

What does coexisting or comorbid conditions mean? - NSW Health

Comorbidity refers to the occurrence of more than one disorder at the same time. It may refer to co-occurring mental disorders or ...

Psychiatric and medical comorbidities of eating disorders: findings ...

It covers recent literature regarding psychiatric comorbidities including anxiety disorders, mood disorders, substance use disorders, trauma and ...

Mental Health Comorbidity: One Thing Leads to Another

—Analysis of 83.9 million person-years of data suggests that diagnosis with a primary mental health disorder increases risk of a subsequent ...

Comorbid mental disorders among adults in the mental health ...

Adults with comorbid mental disorders had lower mean levels of functioning and were more likely to report past-year treatment than adults with a single disorder ...

Psychiatric comorbidity: a concept in need of a theory

Psychiatric comorbidity is therefore typically based solely upon description of psychopathology. If mental disorders had well circumscribed ...

Exploring comorbidity within mental disorders among a Danish ...

Importance: Individuals with mental disorders often develop comorbidity over time. Past studies of comorbidity have often restricted analyses to a subset of ...

Longitudinal Assessment of Mental Health Disorders and ...

By age 45 years, 85% of participants (737 of 869) with a disorder had accumulated comorbid diagnoses. Participants with adolescent-onset ...

Comorbidity of substance use and mental health disorders ... - EUDA

This analysis explains what comorbidity is, its implications for care, types of service provision available in Europe and considers key issues for the future.

'Psychiatric comorbidity': an artefact of current diagnostic systems?

This use of the term 'comorbidity' to indicate the concomitance of two or more psychiatric diagnoses appears incorrect because in most cases it ...

Comorbidity - Wikipedia

In the context of mental health, comorbidity frequently refers to the concurrent existence of mental disorders, for example, the co-occurrence of depressive and ...