OBJECTIVE: The two purposes of this study were to provide a
comprehensive description of the clinical features of patients who
presented to an intake psychiatric setting with major depression and
alcohol dependence and to determine which clinical features distinguished
this dual-diagnosis group from patients with the two relevant single
diagnoses. METHOD: During a recent 5-year period, a total of 107 patients
who came to a psychiatric facility for initial evaluation were diagnosed as
having both major depression and alcohol dependence. The clinical profile
of this dual-diagnosis group was compared to that of nondepressed
alcoholics (N = 497) and nonalcoholic patients with major depression (N =
5,625), assessed at the same facility, on the basis of information from the
Initial Evaluation Form, a semistructured instrument containing a
standardized symptom inventory that includes ratings of severity. RESULTS:
The psychiatric symptom that most strongly distinguished the depressed
alcoholics from the two comparison groups was the level of suicidality. The
depressed alcoholics differed significantly from the nonalcoholic depressed
patients on only two depressive symptoms, suicidality (59% higher) and low
self-esteem (22% higher); they were also significantly distinguished from
the nonalcoholic depressed patients by factors such as greater impulsivity,
functional impairment, and abnormal personal and social history markers.
CONCLUSIONS: Suicidality was disproportionately greater than other
psychiatric symptoms in the depressed alcoholics. The clinical profile of
depressed alcoholics suggests that they suffer an additive or synergistic
effect of two separate disorders, resulting in a disproportionately high
level of acute suicidality upon initial psychiatric evaluation.Abstract Teaser