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Prognosis in Schizophrenia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

Edward A. Strecker
Affiliation:
Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, and Pennsylvania Hospital, Department for Mental and Nervous Diseases, Philadelphia
Gordon F. Willey
Affiliation:
Pennsylvania Hospital, Department for Mental and Nervous Diseases, Philadelphia, and University of Pennsylvania, Graduate School of Medicine, Philadelphia.∗

Extract

Prognosis in psychiatry, and particularly in schizophrenia, is in a somewhat chaotic condition. The dearth of literature concerning prognostic landmarks is convincing evidence as to the truth of this assertion. For many years an unadulterated pessimistic outlook was almost a psychiatric boast. While such an attitude is no longer general, there still tends to be a more or less rigid dependence of prognosis upon diagnosis. Sometimes, and perhaps often, this dependence is so slavish that in a given case a favourable result is interpreted as a sure signal for diagnostic revision.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1927 

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