Subjects admitted 12 months or more previously to two child and adolescent psychiatric units in New Zealand and the United States with a diagnosis of non-organic, nonautistic psychosis, were contacted and those who received a DSM-III-R diagnosis of schizophrenia were studied (n = 33 [New Zealand] and n = 24 [United States]). Premorbid and first-episode data were obtained from the admission record using global clinical measures of moderate reliability, outcome diagnosis and status by interviews, and professional and family reports. Mean ages at onset were 13.9 (New Zealand) and 15.6 (United States). Premorbid and clinical features resembled those in adult schizophrenia, though there were probable quantitative differences. At outcome (mean interval = 4 years) few subjects were symptom-free or independent, and mean global assessment of functioning had fallen from 55 to 40. Outcome was much worse in schizophrenia than bipolar disorder. Despite a 59 percent attrition rate and higher rates of initial misdiagnosis in the United States, and some demographic differences, New Zealand and United States samples resembled each other clinically and in outcome. Initial misdiagnosis of bipolar disorder as schizophrenia was not due to minimizing mood symptoms, which were common in both disorders. Within this age range (mostly 11-17), age at onset had only minor effects. Outcome was best predicted by premorbid personality.
Objective:To determine to what extent research skills are taught and how they are taught to psychiatrists-in-training across Australasia.
Method: Anonymous mail-out survey of training directors and trainee representatives on local training committees.Results: The questionnaire was completed by 20 of 23 directors (response rate = 87%) who reported on 522 trainee psychiatrists. Formal seminars or lectures and journal clubs were the most commonly adopted methods of teaching (90% and 70% of programs respectively) while only two programs formally required trainees' participation in research. Epidemiological research methods, critical appraisal skills, ethical issues, and research design were the topics most commonly taught formally, and these were taught in 80% of programs or less. Only 33 (6.3%) trainees were involved in a research project that involved data collection.
Conclusions:Research skills were rather uniformly taught. The results are discussed in relation to identified areas for improvement.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.