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Dive into the research topics where Morton Kramer is active.

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Featured researches published by Morton Kramer.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1993

One‐month prevalence of mental disorders in the United States and sociodemographic characteristics: the Epidemiologic Catchment Area study

Darrel A. Regier; M. E. Farmer; Donald S. Rae; Jerome K. Myers; Morton Kramer; Lee N. Robins; Linda K. George; Marvin Karno; Ben Z. Locke

The associations between the one‐month prevalence rates of mental disorders and sociodemographic characteristics were investigated for 18571 people interviewed in the first‐wave community samples of all 5 sites in the US National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Epidemiologic Catchment Area program. Men were found to have a significantly higher rate of cognitive impairment than women after controlling for the effects of age, race or ethnicity, marital status and socioeconomic status. Marital status was one of the most powerful correlates of mental disorder risk: the odds of separated or divorced people having any NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule disorder were twice that of married people after controlling for age, gender, race or ethnicity and socioeconomic status. The odds of those in the lowest socioeconomic status group having any Diagnostic Interview Schedule disorder was about 2.5 times that of those in the highest socioeconomic status group, controlling for age, gender, race or ethnicity and marital status. For all disorders except cognitive impairment, race or ethnicity did not remain statistically significant after controlling for age, gender, marital status and socioeconomic status.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1989

The incidence of specific DIS/DSM-III mental disorders: data from the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program

William W. Eaton; Morton Kramer; James C. Anthony; A. Dryman; S. Shapiro; B. Z. Locke

ABSTRACT Incidence data are presented for the 7 most frequent specific categories of mental disorder available in the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area (ECA) program (major depressive disorder; panic disorder; phobic disorder; obsessive‐compulsive disorder; drug abuse/dependence; alcohol abuse/dependence; cognitive impairment). The DSM‐III case definitions in the ECA Program are according to the implementation of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS). Rates of incidence are presented specific for age, sex, and site, and pooled smoothed curves for the relationship of age to incidence, specific for sex are shown. The 7 disorders have distinctly different relationships to sex and age of onset.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1980

The rising pandemic of mental disorders and associated chronic diseases and disabilities

Morton Kramer

Prevalence rates of mental disorders, hypertensive disease, cerebrovascular disease and other chronic conditions are increasing throughout the world. Two mechanisms are responsible for this situation: the large relative increases that are occurring in the number of persons in age groups at high risk for developing these conditions; and the increase in average duration of chronic diseases resulting from the successful application of techniques for arresting their fatal complications and prolonging the lives of affected individuals. In the absence of effective techniques for reducing incidence, the prevalence of such diseases will continue to increase.


American Journal of Public Health | 1986

Mental health and social characteristics of the homeless: a survey of mission users.

Pamela J. Fischer; S Shapiro; William R. Breakey; James C. Anthony; Morton Kramer

Selected mental health and social characteristics of 51 homeless persons drawn as a probability sample from missions are compared to those of 1,338 men aged 18-64 years living in households from the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area survey conducted in Eastern Baltimore. Differences between the two groups were small with respect to age, race, education, and military service but the differences in mental health status, utilization patterns, and social dysfunction were large. About one-third of the homeless scored high on the General Health Questionnaire which measures distress. A similar proportion had a current psychiatric disorder as ascertained by the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS), with the homeless exhibiting higher prevalence rates in every DIS/DSM III diagnostic category compared to domiciled men. Homeless persons reported higher rates of hospitalization than household men for both mental (33 per cent vs 5 per cent) and physical (20 per cent vs 10 per cent) problems but a lower proportion received ambulatory care (41 per cent vs 50 per cent). Social dysfunction among the homeless was indicated by fewer social contacts and higher rates of arrests as adults than domiciled men (58 per cent vs 24 per cent), including multiple arrests (38 per cent vs 9 per cent) and felony convictions (16 per cent vs 5 per cent). Implications of these findings are discussed in terms of research and health policy.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1985

Patterns of mental disorders among the elderly residents of Eastern Baltimore

Morton Kramer; Pearl S. German; James C. Anthony; Michael Von Korff; Elizabeth A. Skinner

An extensive analysis of prevalence rates of cognitive impairment and other mental morbidities was carried out as part of a five‐site national study on the health and mental health of an ambulatory population. This study reports on prevalence rates contrasted by age across the 18 and over population for cognitive impairment and other diagnoses in the Baltimore, Maryland, site of this study. Differences in prevalence rates by age are striking. Eight conditions have rates above 1 per cent among those 64 and younger: phobia (13.8 per cent), alcohol use disorder (6.5 per cent), obsessive compulsive disorder (2.2 per cent), schizophrenia (1.4 per cent), and panic disorder (1.2 per cent). For the older group, 65 to 74 years, five conditions have such prevalence rates: phobic disorder (12.1 per cent), severe cognitive impairment (3.0 per cent), alcohol use disorder (2.1 per cent), obsessive compulsive disorder (2.2 per cent), and dysthymia (1.0 per cent). For the oldest group, those 75 and over, only four conditions have rates of 1 per cent or more. These are: phobic disorders (10.1 per cent), severe cognitive impairment (9.3 per cent), major depression (1.3 per cent), and dysthymia (1.1 per cent). Rates of cognitive impairment increase markedly with age and high rates of this disorder were found among those never married, separated, divorced, or widowed. Implications of these findings for understanding mental morbidity among the elderly and issues for future planning are discussed.


Medical Care | 1985

Measuring need for mental health services in a general population.

Sam Shapiro; Elizabeth A. Skinner; Morton Kramer; Donald M. Steinwachs; Darrel A. Regier

This article presents measures of need for mental health services estimated from the 1981 Eastern Baltimore Mental Health Survey, one of five sites participating in the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program. Data were collected on the prevalence of specific psychiatric disorders, as determined by the standardized Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS), functional status, personal characteristics, patterns of medical and mental health care, and sources of care used. Need is based on mental health services use in the prior 6 months or the presence of two or more manifestations of emotional problems: a) one or more DIS disorders present in the past 6 months, b) a General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) score of four or more current symptoms, or c) the respondents report of having been unable to carry out usual activities in the past 3 months for at least 1 entire day because of an emotional problem. Approximately 14% of adults met the criteria for need, half of whom had made no mental health visits in the prior 6 months and were considered to have unmet need. Need for care was influenced by a variety of sociodemographic and economic characteristics: it was low among the aged and high among persons living alone and the poor on Medicaid. The proportion of need that was unmet varied less but was relatively large for two groups, the aged and nonwhites. Those on Medicaid through public assistance were more likely to have their need met than the near poor.


Medical Care | 1987

An experiment to change detection and management of mental morbidity in primary care.

Sam Shapiro; Pearl S. German; Elizabeth A. Skinner; Michael VonKorff; Raymond W. Turner; Lawrence E. Klein; Mark L. Teitelbaum; Morton Kramer; Jack D. Burke; Barbara J. Burns

A randomized clinical trial was conducted in a group practice for the primary care of adult patients to address the effect of feedback to providers of information from a psychiatric screening questionnaire, the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ). The practice is staffed by faculty, residents, and health care extenders of The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicines Division of Internal Medicine. The patient population was drawn mainly from the inner city community in Baltimore that surrounds the hospital, where the practice is physically based. The GHQ was administered at the time of a regular visit to the practice and results made available to the clinicians for randomly allocated subsamples of their patients. The study results showed that feedback of GHQ information led to only marginal effects on overall detection of mental health problems among the patients in general. However, marked increases in detection occurred among the elderly, blacks, and men, subgroups that ordinarily have relatively low rates of detection of mental morbidity by primary care practitioners. Feedback of GHQ information did not affect management.


Psychological Medicine | 1980

The lifetime prevalence of mental disorders: Estimation, uses and limitations.

Morton Kramer; Michael Von Korff; Larry G. Kessler

The age-specific lifetime prevalence rate of a disease is the proportion of persons surviving to a given age who have experienced the disease at any time during their lives. This measure of morbidity has been used to report findings in many of the epidemiological surveys of mental disorders of the last 30 years. This paper presents a life-table method for estimating age-specific lifetime prevalence rates from incidence and mortality data. The method is applied to Monroe County, New York, case register data on the incidence of schizophrenia. Using this method, we estimate that at least 3% of the White population surviving to age 55 have experienced an episode of schizophrenia at some time during their lives. The difficulties of producing valid estimates of lifetime prevalence and the difficulties in interpreting differences reported in such rates make this morbidity measure of secondary importance to incidence and point-prevalence data.


Psychological Medicine | 1985

Brief report on the clinical reappraisal of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule carried out at the Johns Hopkins site of the Epidemiological Catchment Area Program of the NIMH.

Marshal F. Folstein; Alan J. Romanoski; Gerald Nestadt; Raman Chahal; Altaf Merchant; Sam Shapiro; Morton Kramer; James C. Anthony; Ernest M. Gruenberg; Paul R. McHugh

A psychiatric examination was conducted on 810 community dwelling subjects previously given a diagnosis derived from the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS). The agreement in allocating subjects to a particular disorder was never high enough to encourage the confident replacement of a psychiatric diagnosis with a DIS diagnosis.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1985

Prevalence of treated and untreated dsm-iii schizophrenia: Results of a two-stage community survey

Michael Von Korff; Gerald Nestadt; Alan J. Romanoski; James C. Anthony; William W. Eaton; Altaf Merchant; Raman Chahal; Morton Kramer; Marshal F. Folstein; Ernest M. Gruenberg

Psychiatrists, using a standardized clinical method, examined a probability sample of 810 subjects in eastern Baltimore and made diagnoses of mental disorders among those subjects according to DSM-III criteria. The authors estimated that there were 4.6 active cases of schizophrenia per 1000 adult noninstitutionalized population, and 6.4 cases per 1000 population, including both active and remitted cases. Among the 17 active and remitted schizophrenics identified in the survey, one half were not receiving any form of mental health services at the time of the survey; these data yield a prevalence rate of untreated cases of 3.1 per 1000 population. All of the untreated schizophrenics were deemed by the examining psychiatrist to be in need of services.

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Ben Z. Locke

National Institutes of Health

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Darrel A. Regier

American Psychological Association

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Gerald Nestadt

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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