Title of article :
Gender differences in psychiatric morbidity and violent
behaviour among a household population in Great Britain
Author/Authors :
Min Yang، نويسنده , , Jeremy Coid، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Background Men are more violent than
women. It is unclear whether psychiatric morbidity
contributes to this gender difference in the general
population. This study examined gender differences
in psychiatric diagnosis and violent behaviour to test
whether risk from psychiatric morbidity accounted
for gender differences in violent behaviour; whether
violent males were more vulnerable to risk from
psychiatric morbidity; and, whether violent women
surmounted a higher threshold of risk from psychiatric
morbidity. Methods Cross-sectional random
sample of 8,397 household residents in Great Britain
was assessed using structured questionnaires to
measure violent behaviour and psychiatric morbidity.
Weighted multilevel regression models were used to
test hypotheses, adjusting for demographic factors,
psychiatric comorbidity and area effects of violence.
Results Men were more likely to report violence than
women and were exposed to greater risks from substance
dependence, Antisocial Personality Disorder
(ASPD) and hazardous drinking. Women were exposed
to greater risks from affective/anxiety disorders.
Psychiatric morbidity explained 22% of the
gender difference in violence. Violent men were less
vulnerable to risk from any Personality Disorder
(PD), in particular ASPD, than violent women. Violent
women reported a higher etiological threshold for
affective/anxiety disorders and any PD; violent men
higher threshold for alcohol dependence and hazardous
drinking. Conclusions Psychiatric morbidity
has moderate impact on higher levels of violence
among men. Antisocial Personality Disorder poses a
greater risk for violence among women than men.
Affective/anxiety disorders and any PD are more
severe conditions among violent women; alcohol
dependence and hazardous drinking are more severe
among violent men, confirming the ‘‘Threshold of
Risk’’ hypothesis
Keywords :
national survey – violent behaviour –psychiatric morbidity – gender differences
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)