Severity of depressive episodes according to ICD-10: prediction of risk of relapse and suicide
- PMID: 14754828
- DOI: 10.1192/bjp.184.2.153
Severity of depressive episodes according to ICD-10: prediction of risk of relapse and suicide
Abstract
Background: The ICD-10 categorisation of severity of depression into mild, moderate and severe depressive episodes has not been validated.
Aims: To validate the ICD-10 categorisation of severity of depression by estimating its predictive ability on the course of illness and suicidal outcome.
Method: All psychiatric in-patients in Denmark who had received a diagnosis of a single depressive episode at their first discharge between 1994 and 1999 were identified. The risk of relapse and the risk of suicide were compared for patients discharged with an ICD-10 diagnosis of a single mild, moderate or severe depressive episode.
Results: At their first discharge, 1103 patients had an ICD-10 diagnosis of mild depressive episode, 3182 had a diagnosis of moderate depressive episode and 2914 had a diagnosis of severe depressive episode. The risk of relapse and the risk of suicide were significantly different for the three types of depression--increasing from mild to moderate to severe depressive episode.
Conclusions: The ICD-10 way of grading severity is clinically useful and should be preserved in future versions.
Comment in
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ICD-10 predicts risk of relapse and suicide in people diagnosed with a single depressive episode.Evid Based Ment Health. 2004 Aug;7(3):89. doi: 10.1136/ebmh.7.3.89. Evid Based Ment Health. 2004. PMID: 15273233 No abstract available.
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