OBJECTIVE: The family history method, in which an informant is asked
about the history of psychiatric illness in relatives, is widely used in
psychiatric research. Previous research has examined the influence on
family history information of characteristics of the relative. In this
report, the authors seek to clarify the impact on family history reporting
of the psychiatric history of the informant. METHOD: Both members of female
twin pairs from a population-based twin registry were asked about the
history of major depression, generalized anxiety disorder, and alcoholism
in their mother and father. The authors examined twin pairs discordant for
each of the three diagnoses and predicted that the affected twin would
report higher rates of the same disorder in her parent than would the
unaffected twin. RESULTS: Twins with a history of major depression or
generalized anxiety disorder but not twins with alcoholism were
significantly more likely to report the same disorder in their parents than
were their unaffected co-twins. CONCLUSIONS: For major depression and
generalized anxiety disorder, a family history diagnosis appears to reflect
the psychiatric history of both the relative and the informant. Caution may
be needed in the interpretation of results based on the family history
method, although the magnitude of this problem may be attenuated by the use
of multiple informants.Abstract Teaser