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Assortative Mating, Social Adjustment, and Course of Illness in Primary Affective Disorder
Kathleen R. Merikangas, PhD;
Evelyn J. Bromet, PhD;
Duane G. Spiker, MD
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1983;40(7):795-800.
Abstract
Fifty-six married inpatients with primary affective disorders and their spouses participated in a 12- to 36-month followup study in which the relationship of assortative mating to social adjustment and course of illness was examined. At follow-up, the patients who were concordant with their spouses for psychiatric illness had poorer social adjustment than the group of patients with well spouses. This finding was confirmed by both relatives' ratings and clinicians' ratings of the patients' social adjustment. Measures of relapse since the target hospitalization and self-rated symptoms at the time of follow-up were not different for the two groups. The divorce rate, however, was significantly greater for the couples who were concordant for psychiatric illness when compared with the discordant couples.
Author Affiliations
From the Depression Research Unit, Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, and the Connecticut Mental Health Center, New Haven (Dr Merikangas); and the Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (Drs Bromet and Spiker).
Footnotes
Accepted for publication Nov 26, 1982.
Reprint requests to Depression Research Unit, Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, 904 Howard Ave, Suite 2A, New Haven, CT 06519 (Dr Merikangas).
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