Newbury Joanne, Arseneault Louise, Caspi Avshalom, Moffitt Terrie E, Odgers Candice L, Fisher Helen L
MRC Social, Genetic & Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
MRC Social, Genetic & Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK; Departments of Psychology and Neuroscience, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, and Centre for Genomic and Computational Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC.
Schizophr Bull. 2016 Nov;42(6):1372-1383. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbw052. Epub 2016 May 6.
Urban upbringing is associated with a 2-fold adulthood psychosis risk, and this association replicates for childhood psychotic symptoms. No study has investigated whether specific features of urban neighborhoods increase children's risk for psychotic symptoms, despite these early psychotic phenomena elevating risk for schizophrenia and other psychiatric disorders in adulthood.
Analyses were conducted on over 2000 children from the Environmental Risk (E-Risk) Longitudinal Twin Study, a nationally-representative cohort of UK-born twins. Neighborhood-level characteristics were assessed for each family via: a geodemographic discriminator indexing neighborhood-level deprivation, postal surveys of over 5000 residents living alongside the children, and in-home interviews with the children's mothers. Children were interviewed about psychotic symptoms at age 12. Analyses were adjusted for important family-level confounders including socioeconomic status (SES), psychiatric history, and maternal psychosis.
Urban residency at age-5 (OR = 1.80, 95% CI = 1.16-2.77) and age-12 (OR = 1.76, 95% CI = 1.15-2.69) were both significantly associated with childhood psychotic symptoms, but not with age-12 anxiety, depression, or antisocial behavior. The association was not attributable to family SES, family psychiatric history, or maternal psychosis, each implicated in childhood mental health. Low social cohesion, together with crime victimization in the neighborhood explained nearly a quarter of the association between urbanicity and childhood psychotic symptoms after considering family-level confounders.
Low social cohesion and crime victimization in the neighborhood partly explain why children in cities have an elevated risk of developing psychotic symptoms. Greater understanding of the mechanisms leading from neighborhood-level exposures to psychotic symptoms could help target interventions for emerging childhood psychotic symptoms.
在城市中长大的人成年后患精神病的风险会增加两倍,这种关联在儿童期的精神病症状中也有体现。尽管这些早期的精神病现象会增加成年后患精神分裂症和其他精神疾病的风险,但尚无研究调查城市社区的特定特征是否会增加儿童出现精神病症状的风险。
对来自环境风险(E-Risk)纵向双胞胎研究的2000多名儿童进行了分析,该研究是一个具有全国代表性的英国出生双胞胎队列。通过以下方式评估每个家庭的社区层面特征:一个地理人口统计学鉴别指标,用于衡量社区层面的贫困程度;对与孩子同住的5000多名居民进行邮政调查;以及对孩子母亲进行家访。在孩子12岁时,对其进行精神病症状访谈。分析对重要的家庭层面混杂因素进行了调整,包括社会经济地位(SES)、精神病史和母亲的精神病情况。
5岁时居住在城市(比值比[OR]=1.80,95%置信区间[CI]=1.16-2.77)和12岁时居住在城市(OR=1.76,95%CI=1.15-2.69)均与儿童期精神病症状显著相关,但与12岁时的焦虑、抑郁或反社会行为无关。这种关联并非归因于家庭SES、家庭精神病史或母亲的精神病,这些因素均与儿童心理健康有关。在考虑家庭层面混杂因素后,社会凝聚力低以及社区中的犯罪受害经历解释了城市生活与儿童期精神病症状之间近四分之一的关联。
社区中社会凝聚力低和犯罪受害经历部分解释了城市儿童出现精神病症状风险较高的原因。更好地理解从社区层面暴露因素到精神病症状的机制,有助于针对儿童期新出现的精神病症状进行干预。