Ösby Urban, Westman Jeanette, Hällgren Jonas, Gissler Mika
Division of Family Medicine, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Division of Family Medicine, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
Eur J Public Health. 2016 Oct;26(5):867-871. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckv245. Epub 2016 Jan 8.
People with severe mental illness have increased risk for premature mortality and thus a shorter life expectancy. Relative death rates are used to show the excess mortality among patients with mental health disorder but cannot be used for the comparisons by country, region and time.
A population-based register study including all Swedish patients in adult psychiatry admitted to hospital with a main diagnosis of schizophrenia, bipolar or unipolar mood disorder in 1987-2010 (614 035 person-years). Mortality rates adjusted for age, sex and period were calculated using direct standardization methods with the 2010 Swedish population as standard. Data on all residents aged 15 years or older were used as the comparison group.
Patients with severe mental health disorders had a 3-fold mortality compared to general population. All-cause mortality decreased by 9% for people with bipolar mood disorder and by 26-27% for people with schizophrenia or unipolar mood disorder, while the decline in the general population was 30%. Also mortality from diseases of the circulatory system declined less for people with severe mental disorder (-35% to - 42%) than for general population (-49%). The pattern was similar for other cardiovascular deaths excluding cerebrovascular deaths for which the rate declined among people with schizophrenia (-30%) and unipolar mood disorder (-41%), unlike for people with bipolar mood disorder (-3%).
People with mental health disorder have still elevated mortality. The mortality declined faster for general population than for psychiatric patients. More detailed analysis is needed to reveal causes-of-death with largest possibilities for improvement.
严重精神疾病患者过早死亡的风险增加,因此预期寿命较短。相对死亡率用于显示精神健康障碍患者的超额死亡率,但不能用于国家、地区和时间之间的比较。
一项基于人群的登记研究,纳入了1987年至2010年期间在瑞典成年精神病科住院的所有患者,主要诊断为精神分裂症、双相或单相情绪障碍(614035人年)。采用直接标准化方法,以2010年瑞典人口为标准,计算调整年龄、性别和时期后的死亡率。将所有15岁及以上居民的数据用作对照组。
严重精神健康障碍患者的死亡率是普通人群的3倍。双相情绪障碍患者的全因死亡率下降了9%,精神分裂症或单相情绪障碍患者下降了26%至27%,而普通人群的下降幅度为30%。患有严重精神障碍的人群循环系统疾病死亡率的下降幅度(-35%至-42%)也低于普通人群(-49%)。除脑血管疾病外,其他心血管死亡的模式相似,精神分裂症患者(-30%)和单相情绪障碍患者(-41%)的脑血管疾病死亡率有所下降,而双相情绪障碍患者则不然(-3%)。
精神健康障碍患者的死亡率仍然较高。普通人群的死亡率下降速度比精神科患者更快。需要更详细的分析来揭示最有可能改善的死亡原因。