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Journal Article

Citation

Raja M, Azzoni A, Pucci D. Clin. Pract. Epidemol. Ment. Health 2006; 2.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/1745-0179-2-26

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: 1) to assess the prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in a population of acute psychiatric in-patients; 2) to find out relationships between HCV comorbidity and clinical features of psychiatric patients.

METHODS: Prospective observational study in a 6-year period.

RESULTS: 2396 cases (1492 patients) were admitted in the considered period. Forty-two patients (2.8%) were affected by HCV infection. HCV infection was more frequent in patients with less years of education, lower social class, lower last year best Global Assessment of Functioning score, more hostile or violent behavior in hospital, with a lifetime history of previous suicide attempt, and with substance-related disorders.

CONCLUSION: HCV infection in psychiatric patients constitutes a major threat to the health of psychiatric patients and is related with unfavorable social background, worse global functioning, hostile or violent behavior, substance-related disorders. It appears also to be a significant risk of suicidal behavior. © 2006 Raja et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; human; violence; female; male; prevalence; education; Italy; scoring system; suicide attempt; suicidal behavior; comorbidity; risk factor; substance abuse; article; major clinical study; urban area; mental disease; controlled study; neuroleptic agent; hospital admission; clinical feature; psychiatric department; hostility; hospital patient; benzodiazepine derivative; hepatitis C; social class; valproic acid; prospective study; Hepatitis C virus; observational study; lithium salt

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