PSYCHIATRIC COMORBIDITY AND TREATMENT SEEKING - SOURCES OF SELECTION BIAS IN THE STUDY OF CLINICAL POPULATIONS

Citation
Gg. Dufort et al., PSYCHIATRIC COMORBIDITY AND TREATMENT SEEKING - SOURCES OF SELECTION BIAS IN THE STUDY OF CLINICAL POPULATIONS, The Journal of nervous and mental disease, 181(8), 1993, pp. 467-474
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry,Psychiatry,"Clinical Neurology
ISSN journal
00223018
Volume
181
Issue
8
Year of publication
1993
Pages
467 - 474
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3018(1993)181:8<467:PCATS->2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
Population studies have shown that the co-occurrence of psychiatric di sorders increases the likelihood of treatment seeking. This leads to a biased estimation of the prevalence of comorbidity in clinical sample s, and this overestimation can be attributed to two different sources of selection bias. Using data from a population survey of psychiatric disorders, in which 3258 residents of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, were interviewed with the Diagnostic Interview Schedule, we assessed the ex tent of each of these two mechanisms. The first source of selection bi as is the mathematical bias known as Berkson's bias and arises from th e fact that an individual affected with two psychiatric disorders can seek treatment for either one or the other of these disorders. The sec ond source of selection bias is clinical and results from the changed probability of seeking a treatment for a specific disorder because of the existence of a comorbid disorder.