Disability and Comorbidity: Diagnoses and Symptoms Associated with Disability in a Clinical Population with Panic Disorder

Background. Anxiety disorders are associated with considerable disability in the domains of (1) work, (2) social, and (3) family and home interactions. Psychiatric comorbidity is also known to be associated with disability. Methods. Data from the Cross-National Collaborative Panic Study was used to...

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Main Authors: Caroline A. Bonham, Eberhard Uhlenhuth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2014-01-01
Series:Psychiatry Journal
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/619727
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spelling doaj-a7d178c0c9244c80a0a989bdc8e08e8f2020-11-24T21:17:48ZengHindawi LimitedPsychiatry Journal2314-43272314-43352014-01-01201410.1155/2014/619727619727Disability and Comorbidity: Diagnoses and Symptoms Associated with Disability in a Clinical Population with Panic DisorderCaroline A. Bonham0Eberhard Uhlenhuth1Department of Psychiatry, Center for Rural and Community Behavioral Health, University of New Mexico, MSC09 5030, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USADepartment of Psychiatry, University of New Mexico, MSC09 5030, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USABackground. Anxiety disorders are associated with considerable disability in the domains of (1) work, (2) social, and (3) family and home interactions. Psychiatric comorbidity is also known to be associated with disability. Methods. Data from the Cross-National Collaborative Panic Study was used to identify rates of comorbid diagnoses, anxiety and depression symptom ratings, and Sheehan disability scale ratings from a clinical sample of 1165 adults with panic disorder. Results. Comorbid diagnoses of agoraphobia, major depression, and social phobia were associated with disability across the three domains of work, social, and family and home interactions. The symptom of agoraphobic avoidance makes the largest contribution to disability but there is no single symptom cluster that entirely predicts impairment and disability. Limitations. The findings about the relative contributions that comorbid diagnoses make to disability only apply to a population with panic disorder. Conclusions. Although panic disorder is not generally considered to be among the serious and persistent mental illnesses, when it is comorbid with other diagnoses, it is associated with considerable impairment. In particular, the presence of agoraphobic avoidance should alert the clinician to the likelihood of important functional impairment. When measuring the functional impact of comorbid anxiety disorders, both the categorical and the dimensional approaches to diagnosis make valuable contributions.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/619727
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caroline A. Bonham
Eberhard Uhlenhuth
spellingShingle Caroline A. Bonham
Eberhard Uhlenhuth
Disability and Comorbidity: Diagnoses and Symptoms Associated with Disability in a Clinical Population with Panic Disorder
Psychiatry Journal
author_facet Caroline A. Bonham
Eberhard Uhlenhuth
author_sort Caroline A. Bonham
title Disability and Comorbidity: Diagnoses and Symptoms Associated with Disability in a Clinical Population with Panic Disorder
title_short Disability and Comorbidity: Diagnoses and Symptoms Associated with Disability in a Clinical Population with Panic Disorder
title_full Disability and Comorbidity: Diagnoses and Symptoms Associated with Disability in a Clinical Population with Panic Disorder
title_fullStr Disability and Comorbidity: Diagnoses and Symptoms Associated with Disability in a Clinical Population with Panic Disorder
title_full_unstemmed Disability and Comorbidity: Diagnoses and Symptoms Associated with Disability in a Clinical Population with Panic Disorder
title_sort disability and comorbidity: diagnoses and symptoms associated with disability in a clinical population with panic disorder
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Psychiatry Journal
issn 2314-4327
2314-4335
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Background. Anxiety disorders are associated with considerable disability in the domains of (1) work, (2) social, and (3) family and home interactions. Psychiatric comorbidity is also known to be associated with disability. Methods. Data from the Cross-National Collaborative Panic Study was used to identify rates of comorbid diagnoses, anxiety and depression symptom ratings, and Sheehan disability scale ratings from a clinical sample of 1165 adults with panic disorder. Results. Comorbid diagnoses of agoraphobia, major depression, and social phobia were associated with disability across the three domains of work, social, and family and home interactions. The symptom of agoraphobic avoidance makes the largest contribution to disability but there is no single symptom cluster that entirely predicts impairment and disability. Limitations. The findings about the relative contributions that comorbid diagnoses make to disability only apply to a population with panic disorder. Conclusions. Although panic disorder is not generally considered to be among the serious and persistent mental illnesses, when it is comorbid with other diagnoses, it is associated with considerable impairment. In particular, the presence of agoraphobic avoidance should alert the clinician to the likelihood of important functional impairment. When measuring the functional impact of comorbid anxiety disorders, both the categorical and the dimensional approaches to diagnosis make valuable contributions.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/619727
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