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Diagnosis ‘Uncertain’: A Follow-up Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

B. H. Anstee
Affiliation:
Old Manor Hospital, Salisbury, and Salisbury General Infirmary; Department of Psychological Medicine, Guy's Hospital, London SE1
J. J. Fleminger
Affiliation:
Guy's Hospital, London SE1

Extract

During a ten year study, 10 per cent of patients at a general hospital in-patient unit had unsolved diagnostic problems at the time of discharge from hospital. These 132 cases were designated ‘uncertain’ and were followed up. Eighty-three patients were ultimately diagnosed, and 300 consecutive in-patients discharged from the same unit with a definite diagnosis were also studied. The clinical features and diagnoses of the two groups were compared. Special features associated with uncertainty were: a presenting complaint of pain; apathy without apparent mental or physical cause; hallucinosis or major paranoid symptoms without other good evidence of psychosis. Age was found to be relevant; compared with patients receiving confident diagnoses, those with uncertain diagnosis due to depressive psychosis were more often younger, while those due to neurosis or personality disorder tended to be older. Atypical psychotic depression was the condition most commonly associated with diagnostic doubt.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1977 

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