M ental I llness C oncerns A ll

a recap of what the epidemiology tells us: James Kirkbride [ from Cambridge UK ]summarises [ extracts from Schizophrenia Research Forum[SRF ]

1. There is variation in the incidence of schizophrenia across the globe. Rates vary between countries,
within countries (increasing with urbanicity, including urban birth), and within small areas

(even, e.g., within cities—see Faris and Dunham, 1939 —and subsequent contemporary followers).

2. No such variation is seen for bipolar disorder.

3. Higher rates of schizophrenia are associated with more marked inequalities in social deprivation
—in terms of neighborhood poverty to an extent, but also in terms of social disorganization.
Areas with less cohesiveness seem to have higher rates.

4. Rates of all psychotic disorders (schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, e.g.) are increased for immigrants
and their offspring (so-called second-generation groups; see SRF related news story and SRF news story ).

5. This has been found in the U.K., Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark, and other European countries, and the U.S. (Bresnahan et al., 2007 ).

6. Raised rates appear highest in immigrants and their offspring
when skin color differences between the “background” and “immigrant” populations are greatest
—in the U.K., for example, incidence rates are around five to eight times higher in black Caribbean and African immigrants and their offspring
than in the white British group, three to four times higher for Asian women (not men),
and twice as high for non-British white migrants.

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James Kirkbride Victoria, no, but I am not convinced the rate in Asians is as low as commonly suggested
. Excess in Asian women in Coid's East London sample was five times that of white British women.
It could be differential social support rather than genetics that makes the difference
—there may be many cultural differences between Asian women and men in the U.K. to explain these findings.

Jan Golembiewski ,,, James, Asian women in London often have extreme stress but often lack the social support they had at “home.”

James Kirkbride

Jan, this is one working hypothesis we should test.
It is possible that Asian women lose the social support they had in their country of origin
and may occupy a more marginal place in the U.K.
Jan Golembiewski ... James, it would be very interesting to see if those women are more first-generation or second.
They could have married into migration, so to speak, and live with impossible in-laws


Jan, they are more first-generation—see our paper (Coid et al., 2008 ).
.


7. The risk of schizophrenia in immigrants and their offspring is not explained by:
(a) Selective migration (Selten et al., 2002 ),
(b) higher rates in country of origin,
(c) misdiagnosis,
or (d) sociodemographic confounds such as age, sex, and ethnicity.

8. Ethnic density phenomenon—the risk of schizophrenia increases in immigrants and their offspring
when they live farther away from people of the same ethnic group (i.e., when they are more isolated from their own ethnic group).

Okay, these are the main findings.


original article third world better

third world better ? comments on original article

Julian Leff January 2008: letter of comment ; schizophrenia forum.

Third world better ?? Methodological issues

I agree with the authors’ criticism of the use of the dichotomy between developed and developing countries, partly because of the difficulty in defining these terms and partly due to the myriad different social, cultural, and economic factors subsumed by them. While ‘‘low income’’ and ‘‘middle income’’ can be reasonably accurately defined, they also encompass a great diversity of factors, both within and between countries. In addition, the authors have aggregated 23 studies including prevalence and incidence samples and prospective and retrospective designs.

They acknowledge that a meta-analysis is ruled out by this diversity of sampling procedures and methods but nevertheless proceed to treat these studies as providing equally informative findings.

An incidence study is likely to miss a small proportion of individuals fulfilling the selection criteria—11 percent in the AESOP study (Morgan et al., 2006 ), which used case finding procedures based on those in the International Studies of Schizophrenia (ISoS) research.

However, a prevalence study will fail to include a high proportion of people who experience an acute first onset of schizophrenia from which they recover completely, thus introducing a bias toward chronicity.


The International Pilot Study of Schizophrenia was based on prevalence samples because its aim was to determine whether it was possible to train psychiatrists from different countries to use assessment instruments in a reliable way, to establish whether schizophrenia exists in all the cultures studied, and to determine whether an international collaborative study in psychiatry was achievable.
The success of this venture paved the way for the Determinants of Outcome of Severe Mental Disorders (DOSMeD), the main strength of its design being the collection of an epidemiologically based incidence sample followed prospectively in each center using the same instruments.

Cohen and colleagues have taken a step backwards in conflating results from both incidence and prevalence studies. These authors state that ‘‘Except for the China ISoS site, sampling in all the WHO studies relied on a variety of help-seeking agencies to identify potential subjects.’’

I am particularly familiar with the Chandigarh site from the DOSMeD study because I visited it several times and went on field trips to the rural areas with the researchers. The city of Chandigarh has a highly literate population, 70 percent during the period of the study, and a Postgraduate Medical Institute of considerable sophistication in which the psychiatric facility was sited. The proportion of incident cases derived from help-seeking agencies would consequently be minimal. By contrast, the rural areas around the city have populations with a low level of literacy, 30 percent at the time, and limited access to medical facilities. To deal with this problem, Professor Wig, the director of the center, established a mobile team of psychiatric professionals who made regular circuits of the rural areas, holding outpatient clinics to identify and treat potential subjects for the study.

This procedure increased the likelihood that all incident cases were identified. It is noteworthy that the data from the Nigerian center in Ibadan were given less weight than those from other centers in the ‘‘developing’’ countries because the case finding procedures, compared with those in Chandigarh, were not considered to be sufficiently comprehensive.

The role of families

More prospective first-onset studies have been conducted in India than in any other low-income country, and the clinical, social, and occupational outcomes are consistently good. For this reason, the family study incorporated in the Chandigarh center’s research is of particular interest. Two aspects of the findings need emphasis: the contrast between the prevalence of relatives’ expressed emotion (EE) in the city and in the rural areas and the contribution made by the generally low levels of EE to the good clinical outcome of the patients in this center. The local field workers in the Chandigarh center were trained to assess EE to an acceptable level of inter-rater reliability.

The proportion of urban relatives of first-onset patients with schizophrenia who were rated as high EE was found to be 30 percent, while the comparable proportion for rural relatives was only 8 percent. At the 1-year follow-up, levels of EE had dropped in both groups: 12.5 percent of urban relatives were rated as high EE, but not a single rural relative (Leff et al., 1990 ). This latter finding has no precedent among relatives in high-income countries.

A comparison across a wide variety of countries has shown that the prevalence of high EE households is greatest among the most industrialized and urbanized societies and least among rural agrarian societies (Leff and Warner, 2006).

A comparison was made between the Chandigarh sample of first contact patients and a sample of London patients admitted for the first time with a diagnosis of schizophrenia, both groups being assessed with the same instruments.
The proportion of high EE relatives was 47 percent in the London sample and 23 percent in the total Chandigarh sample (P <0.005). The relapse rates at 1-year follow-up showed the same pattern: 29 percent and 14 percent, respectively (P<0.05). A log linear analysis of these data revealed that the better outcome for the Chandigarh patients was wholly predicted by the lower level of EE (Kuipers and Bebbington, 1988 ).

I would be cautious about generalizing from these results to the other Indian centers, let alone to all low-income countries, but the explanatory power of relatives’ EE is such (Butzlaff and Hooley, 1998 ) that it merits incorporation in further studies of variation in outcome across countries and cultures. Recent research indicates that socio-environmental factors are implicated in the etiology of schizophrenia as well as influencing its course (Morgan et al., 2007 ).

However, the role of these factors is unlikely to be elucidated at the national level. Focusing research on the local social environment for specific groups, particularly at the familial level, will prove more productive. The EE studies provide an example of the level of analysis that is likely to advance our understanding of cross-national differences in outcome.

References: Morgan C, Dazzan P, Morgan K, Jones P, Harrison G, Leff J, Murray R, Fearon P, . First episode psychosis and ethnicity: initial findings from the AESOP study. World Psychiatry. 2006 Feb 1;5(1):40-6. Abstract Leff J, Wig NN, Bedi H, Menon DK, Kuipers L, Korten A, Ernberg G, Day R, Sartorius N, Jablensky A. Relatives' expressed emotion and the course of schizophrenia in Chandigarh. A two-year follow-up of a first-contact sample. Br J Psychiatry. 1990 Mar 1;156():351-6. Abstract Leff J, Warner R. Social Inclusion of People with Mental Illness. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2006:12–13. Kuipers L, Bebbington P. Expressed emotion research in schizophrenia: theoretical and clinical implications. Psychol Med. 1988 Nov 1;18(4):893-909. Abstract Butzlaff RL, Hooley JM. Expressed emotion and psychiatric relapse: a meta-analysis. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1998 Jun 1;55(6):547-52. Abstract Morgan C, Kirkbride J, Leff J, Craig T, Hutchinson G, McKenzie K, Morgan K, Dazzan P, Doody GA, Jones P, Murray R, Fearon P. Parental separation, loss and psychosis in different ethnic groups: a case-control study. Psychol Med. 2007 Apr 1;37(4):495-503. Abstract

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