Background: The potential of first-episode studies in schizophrenia is maximised through systematic epidemiological, clinical and biological comparisons between homogeneous populations of the psychoses.
Aims: To conduct prolonged accrual of 'all' cases of non-affective and affective psychotic illness on an epidemiologically complete basis.
Method: Within the region covered by Cavan-Monaghan psychiatric service (population 102,810), all putative cases of first-episode psychosis were diagnosed using DSM-IV.
Results: From 1995 to 2000, 69 cases of psychosis were ascertained, the incidence being 2.3-fold lower in females than in males. On resolving the 'core' diagnoses of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, incidence of schizophrenia among women was 7.5-fold lower than among men whereas incidence of bipolar disorder among women was 6.6-fold lower than among men.
Conclusions: This homogeneous population, which eliminates factors associated with urbanicity and minimises confounding factors such as socioeconomic, ethnic and geographical diversity, shows a markedly reduced incidence among females both of schizophrenia and of bipolar disorder.