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Birth Seasonality and Schizophrenia
Lewis A. Opler, MD, Phd;
Stanley R. Kay, Phd
Department of Psychiatry Albert Einstein College of Medicine/ Montefiore Medical Center and Bronx Psychiatric Center 1500 Waters Pl Bronx, NY 10461
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1985;42(1):107.
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| Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings. |
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To the Editor.—
We were intrigued by the findings of Watson et al1 regarding schizophrenic birth seasonality, particularly their suggestion that an increase in the number of winter births is demonstrable in schizophrenics with severe process disorder but not in schizophrenics with good prognoses and reactive syndromes. We have arrived at a parallel finding from a different direction, in which we examined the hypothesis, advanced by Andreasen and Olsen,2 that schizophrenics with positive syndromes (eg, a predominance of florid symptoms such as thought disorder, hallucinations, and delusions) and schizophrenics with negative syndromes (eg, a predominance of symptoms such as impoverished speech and thinking, affective flattening, avolition, and anhedonia) represent distinct subtypes. When comparing groups of well-characterized schizophrenics who met our criteria for a positive v negative syndrome, we reported3 that the patients with negative syndromes displayed more primitive cognitive modes on developmental tests and greater psychomotor retardation, despite equivalent
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
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