Bhavsar Vishal, Boydell Jane, Murray Robin, Power Paddy
Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny Park Road, London SE5 8AF, United Kingdom.
St. Patrick's Hospital, James Street, Dublin 8, Ireland.
Schizophr Res. 2014 Jun;156(1):115-21. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2014.03.014. Epub 2014 Apr 14.
Several studies have found an association between area deprivation and incidence of schizophrenia. However, not all studies have concurred and definitions of deprivation have varied between studies. Relative deprivation and inequality seem to be particularly important, but which aspects of deprivation or how this effect might operate is not known.
The Lambeth Early Onset case register is a database of all cases of first episode psychosis aged 16 to 35years from the London Borough of Lambeth, a highly urban area. We identified 405 people with first onset schizophrenia who presented between 2000 and 2007. We calculated the overall incidence of first onset schizophrenia and tested for an association with area-level deprivation, using a multi-domain index of deprivation (IMD 2004). Specific analyses into associations with individual sub-domains of deprivation were then undertaken.
Incidence rates, directly standardized for age and gender, were calculated for Lambeth at two geographical levels (small and large neighbourhood level). The Poisson regression model predicting incidence rate ratios for schizophrenia using overall deprivation score was statistically significant at both levels after adjusting for ethnicity, ethnic density, population density and population turnover. The incidence rate ratio for electoral ward deprivation was 1.03 (95% CI=1.004-1.04) and for the super output area deprivation was 1.04 (95% CI=1.02-1.06). The individual domains of crime, employment deprivation and educational deprivation were statistically significant predictors of incidence but, after adjusting for the other domains as well as age, gender, ethnicity and population density, only crime and educational deprivation, remained statistically significant. Low income, poor housing and deprived living environment did not predict incidence.
In a highly urban area, an association was found between area-level deprivation and incidence of schizophrenia, after controlling for age, gender, ethnicity and population density; high crime and low levels of education accounted for this. As both of these are potentially modifiable, this suggests a possible means to reduce the incidence of schizophrenia.
多项研究发现地区贫困与精神分裂症发病率之间存在关联。然而,并非所有研究都得出相同结论,而且不同研究对贫困的定义也有所不同。相对贫困和不平等似乎尤为重要,但贫困的哪些方面或这种影响如何起作用尚不清楚。
兰贝斯早发病例登记册是一个数据库,收录了来自伦敦兰贝斯区(一个高度城市化地区)所有16至35岁首次发作精神病病例。我们确定了2000年至2007年间首次发病的405例精神分裂症患者。我们计算了首次发病精神分裂症的总体发病率,并使用多领域贫困指数(2004年IMD)测试其与地区层面贫困的关联。然后对与贫困各个子领域的关联进行了具体分析。
针对兰贝斯区两个地理层面(小邻里层面和大邻里层面),计算了按年龄和性别直接标准化后的发病率。在调整种族、种族密度、人口密度和人口流动后,使用总体贫困得分预测精神分裂症发病率比的泊松回归模型在两个层面均具有统计学意义。选区贫困的发病率比为1.03(95%置信区间=1.004-1.04),超级输出区贫困的发病率比为1.04(95%置信区间=1.02-1.06)。犯罪、就业贫困和教育贫困等个体领域是发病率的统计学显著预测因素,但在调整其他领域以及年龄、性别、种族和人口密度后,只有犯罪和教育贫困仍具有统计学意义。低收入、住房条件差和生活环境贫困并不能预测发病率。
在一个高度城市化地区,在控制年龄、性别、种族和人口密度后,发现地区层面贫困与精神分裂症发病率之间存在关联;高犯罪率和低教育水平是造成这种情况的原因。由于这两者都有可能得到改善,这表明可能存在一种降低精神分裂症发病率的方法。