Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4929923 | Asian Journal of Psychiatry | 2016 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Clinical manifestations of schizophrenia are believed to be becoming less severe in Japan, but little evidence supports this theory. We investigated the percentages of undergraduate students attending national universities in Japan who required temporary leave and who dropped out because of schizophrenia in the academic years 1986-1987, 1994-1995, and 2013-2014. The percentages of students who required temporary leave and those who dropped out because of schizophrenia significantly decreased over time. The severity of clinical manifestations of schizophrenia may have decreased, enabling more students with schizophrenia to continue their study, or the incidence of schizophrenia might have declined.
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Authors
Yasuko Fuse-Nagase, Jun Miura, Ikuro Namura, Takeshi Sato, Katsuhiro Yasumi, Toshiyuki Marutani, Yoshiro Sugita,