Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 42, Issue 4 , Pages 301-305, July 2001

Gender differences in a sample of schizophrenic outpatients

From the Sant Joan de Déu, Serveis Salut Mental, Barcelona, Spain.

Abstract 

Our objective was to study gender differences in schizophrenia, comparing clinical, social, and illness course characteristics. A sample of 239 schizophrenic (DSM-IV criteria) outpatients were administered the following instruments: service use and demographic questionnaires, the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS), the Disability Assessment Scale (DAS), and the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scale. The female to male ratio was 1/2. Men had an earlier age at onset. Women were more likely to be married and to live independently, and there were more unemployed men. Social functioning was slightly better in women (lower DAS scoring). No differences were found in symptomatological variables (global or separate PANSS scales), nor in type of schizophrenia. Course of illness in the past year appeared to be similar, except for longer hospital stays in men. We conclude that schizophrenic women had a significantly better social functioning, despite the lack of remarkable symptomatic differences between genders.

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 Supported by a grant from the Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias (FIS) no. 97/1257 (Spanish Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo).

PII: S0010-440X(01)64926-5

doi:10.1053/comp.2001.24582

Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 42, Issue 4 , Pages 301-305, July 2001