The value of the reintegration and rehabilitation of inpatients vocationally was studied. Certain of the vocational experiences (unemployment and stressful working conditions) of former psychiatric inpatients were examined, with attention being paid to their stabilizing or destabilizing effect on symptomatic behaviour. A cohort of 230 first-time admissions for treatment of various disorders were interviewed while hospitalized and 1 year later. A 20-item list prepared by INFAS was used for indexing stressful working conditions. Psychopathological states were assessed with the help of the Present State Examination of Wing et al. (1973). The results indicate that mentally ill persons (especially those with organic or affective disorders), when confronted with unemployment after discharge from hospital, will usually respond by developing new or worse syndromes. Stressful working conditions appear to have very different effects in schizophrenia and affective disorders, viz. deterioration and amelioration of psychopathological syndromes respectively.
In this study the course of Readmission after one, 2.5 and 5 years was examinated at a sample of 258 first admitted psychiatric patients of different diagnostic groups. In the analysis occupational, soziodemographic and clinical parameters of these patients were related to the readmission after 5 years and studied if these parameters allow a predictive statement. It was shown that 40%-60% (dependent of diagnoses) of the patients were readmitted in a period of 5 years. The course of the readmission also varied in the different diagnostic groups. The most striking result was the rate of readmission of the schizophrenic psychoses which was at the time of the 1 year catamnesis below average after the 2.5 year analysis however above average. Beside these findings occupational and clinical predictors were identified in all diagnostic groups with exception of the schizophrenic psychoses group. The results are discussed and attention is put on possible consequences to prevent rehospitalization.
In a prospectively designed follow-up study of 258 first admitted psychiatric patients, 1 year after discharge 224 patients and 175 significant others were asked about the social adjustment of these patients and some predictors for this aspect of outcome could be identified. The sample consisted of five different diagnostic groups: organically caused psychiatric diseases, schizophrenic psychoses, affective psychoses, neurotic or personality disorders and alcohol or drug dependency. The study shows that statements about the social adjustment of psychiatric patients largely depend on the diagnostic group, both with respect to degree of adjustment and the predictors. Schizophrenic patients were found to be less well socially adjusted than the other patients, with the exception of the alcohol- and drug-addicted patients. For schizophrenic patients, post-hospital social adjustment was primarily determined by indicators of mental illness, such as psychopathological symptoms and length of hospitalization. The social adjustment of addicted patients was primary influenced by vocational variables. For the patients with organic psychiatric disorders, affective psychoses or neurotic/personality disorders, prediction by pre-hospital or hospital variables did not prove to be very useful.
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