Until recently, most of the research on schizophrenia has focused on young adults. With increasing longevity, the number of older schizophrenia patients in the population is expected to grow. Late-life schizophrenia patients fall into two groups: those who developed schizophrenia for the first time in later adulthood (late-onset schizophrenia) and those who developed the illness earlier in life and are presently middleaged or elderly. There is a scarcity of published studies on late-life schizophrenia. The available data tend to challenge the commonly held view of schizophrenia as a disorder with onset restricted to the first half of life and a progressively deteriorating course. Further work on this important but long-neglected patient population is urgently needed for clinical as well as research purposes. © 1993 Oxford University Press.
CITATION STYLE
Jeste, D. V. (1993). Late-life schizophrenia: Editor’s introduction. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 19(4), 687–689. https://doi.org/10.1093/schbul/19.4.687
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