A cross sectional study among patients with co-morbidities of alcohol dependence and mental illness admitted in Institute of Psychiatry, Kolkata

Authors

  • Ajay Halder Department of Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Kolkata
  • Uday Sankar Mandal Department of Psychiatry, R. G. Kar Medical College, Kolkata
  • Sikha Mukhopadhyay Department of Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Kolkata
  • Abhijit Chakraborty Department of Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Kolkata
  • Tamoghna Bandopadhyay Department of Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Kolkata
  • Arghya Halder Department of Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Kolkata

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51332/bjp.2015.v20.i2.36

Keywords:

Alcohol dependence, Substance abuse, Psychiatric comorbidities

Abstract

Background : Psychiatric comorbidities are not very uncommon particularly in alcohol dependent patients. They are sometime very difficult to treat and overall prognosis is unpredictable most of the time.
Aims : To measure the prevalence of several psychiatric comorbidities in patients with alcohol dependence.
Settings and Design : The study assessed the prevalence of psychiatric comorbidities among 100 alcohol dependent patients admitted in Institute of Psychiatry, Kolkata.
Methods and Material : A semistructuredproforma and Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID) diagnostic tools were used among alcohol dependent patients who met inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Statistical Analysis used : Statistical analysis was done by using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS).
Results : The psychiatric comorbidities among alcohol dependent patients were depression (32%), Bipolar affective disorder (20%), Anxiety disorder (18%), Personality disorder (10%), Schizophrenia (10%).
Conclusions : Most of the patients in this study were males. Those of (V-X) educational standard, male persons of mean age group 25.4 years and having monthly family income of Rs 1,000 - 5,000 were most vulnerable group of alcohol dependence with comorbidities. The most common psychiatric comorbidity was depression (32.5%).
Key Message : Alcohol abuse is a great worldwide problem and psychiatric comorbidities are
not uncommon with alcohol dependence. However, the co-morbidity with substance problems
is underreported and understudied. Early detection and prompt intervention to treat alcohol
dependence is essentially needed to overcome this burning problem.

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Published

2018-02-16

Issue

Section

Original Research Papers