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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Nov 22.
Published in final edited form as: J Clin Psychiatry. 2013 Mar;74(3):10.4088/JCP.12m08049. doi: 10.4088/JCP.12m08049

Table 1.

Sociodemographic and Clinical Characteristics at Study Intake for Subjects with Bipolar I Disorder N = 219

Characteristic
Age, years, mean (SD) 37 (13)
Sex, n (%)
 male 97 (44)
 female 122 (56)
Marital Status, n (%)
 never married 84 (38)
 married/live together 85 (39)
 divorced, separated, or widowed 50 (23)
Socioeconomic Status, n (%)a, b
 I 8 (4)
 II 32 (15)
 III 69 (32)
 IV 63 (29)
 V 47 (21)
Intake Medical Center, n (%)
 Boston 34 (16)
 Chicago 43 (20)
 Iowa City 62 (28)
 New York 31 (14)
 St. Louis 49 (22)
Status at Intake, n, (%)
 inpatient 196 (89)
 outpatient 23 (11)
Polarity of Mood State at Study Intake, n (%)
 mania 142 (65)
 major depression 62 (28)
 mixed 15 (7)
Psychosis, n (%)
 present 121 (55)
 absent 98 (45)
Global Assessment Scale score, mean (SD)c 32 (11)
Age of Onset for First Lifetime Mood Episode (major depression, minor depression, mania or hypomania), years, mean (SD) 24 (10)
Number of Mood Episodes Prior to Intake Episode, n (%)
 0 27 (12)
 1 20 (9)
 2 26 (12)
 3 or more 146 (67)
a

Hollingshead-Redlich scale: I = highest, V = lowest32

b

Percents do not sum to 100 because of rounding.

c

The range for the Global Assessment Scale is 1 to 100, and higher numbers indicate less psychopathology and better psychosocial functioning.33