Song Shige, Wang Wei, Hu Peifeng
Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China.
Soc Sci Med. 2009 Apr;68(7):1315-21. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.01.027. Epub 2009 Feb 14.
Using data from large scale, nationally representative sample surveys, we tested the hypothesis that prenatal exposure to famine increases schizophrenia risk at adulthood by studying the Great Leap Forward Famine in China (1959-1961). Our results show that, in the urban population, being conceived and born during the famine increased the risk of developing schizophrenia at early adulthood as compared to both the pre-famine and post-famine cohorts. In the rural population, however, the post-famine cohort had the highest risk of developing schizophrenia, and there was virtually no difference in schizophrenia risk between the pre-famine and the famine cohort. This finding contrasts sharply with previous studies on the Dutch Hunger Winter as well as with smaller scale local studies in China based on hospital records. We offer an explanation for the urban-rural difference in the schizophrenia-famine relationship based on population selection by differential excess mortality and provide supportive evidence through province- and cohort-level ecological analysis.
利用大规模、具有全国代表性的样本调查数据,我们通过研究中国的“大跃进”饥荒(1959 - 1961年)来检验产前暴露于饥荒会增加成年后患精神分裂症风险这一假设。我们的研究结果表明,在城市人口中,与饥荒前和饥荒后的队列相比,在饥荒期间受孕并出生的人在成年早期患精神分裂症的风险增加。然而,在农村人口中,饥荒后队列患精神分裂症的风险最高,而饥荒前和饥荒队列之间的精神分裂症风险几乎没有差异。这一发现与之前关于荷兰饥荒冬天的研究以及中国基于医院记录的小规模本地研究形成了鲜明对比。我们基于不同的超额死亡率导致的人口选择,对精神分裂症与饥荒关系中的城乡差异做出了解释,并通过省级和队列水平的生态分析提供了支持性证据。