OBJECTIVE: This study tested the impression that there have been
significant shifts in the relative diagnostic frequencies of schizophrenia
and major affective disorders. METHOD: Data on discharge diagnoses from
1972 to 1988 were gathered from six North American psychiatric teaching
hospitals (data from one extended through 1991), and rates for
schizophrenia and major mood disorders were evaluated. RESULTS: Total
annual discharges increased by 6.6% during the study period. Large
reciprocal shifts in the frequencies of diagnoses of schizophrenia and
major affective disorders were found; schizoaffective disorder was a minor
diagnosis. Beginning in the early 1970s, a gradual increase in the
frequency of diagnoses of major affective disorders at all sites was
accompanied by a corresponding decrease in diagnoses of schizophrenia at
five of the six centers. Schizophrenia diagnoses decreased from a peak of
27% in 1976 to 9% in 1989 (a threefold decrease), and diagnoses of major
affective disorders rose from a low of 10% in 1972 to 44% in 1990 (a
fourfold increase). CONCLUSIONS: Several forces may have influenced these
changes. 1) DSM-III narrowed the definition of schizophrenia and broadened
the category of major affective disorders. 2) Treatment-oriented diagnostic
bias associated with the availability of lithium and other mood-altering
agents may have encouraged consideration of affective disorders. 3)
Economic and social forces, including better third-party reimbursement
rates, may have favored affective diagnoses. 4) True increases in the
incidence of affective disorders may have occurred. 5) Although a real
decrease in new cases of schizophrenia may have occurred, this effect was
probably minor and dominated by a larger shift of such diagnoses to
affective categories.Abstract Teaser