Werlen Laura, Helgesson Magnus, Mittendorfer-Rutz Ellenor
Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Division of Insurance Medicine, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, SE-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden.
BMJ Open. 2017 Mar 17;7(3):e014431. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014431.
Immigrants with common mental disorders (CMDs) are reported to have a higher risk of disability pension (DP) compared with native residents; however, the reasons for this are not fully understood. This study aimed to investigate (1) differences in morbidity (3 measures) and socioeconomic status in native Swedes, 'Western' and 'non-Western' immigrants with CMDs and (2) interactions between morbidity and socioeconomic status and immigrant status regarding subsequent DP.
The study was a prospective population-based cohort study using national register data. Crude and multivariate HRs with 95% CIs were calculated using the Cox regression (2007-2010).
All individuals aged 18-59 with an incident sick-leave spell due to CMDs during 2006 were included in the study (N=66 097). The study population was divided into 3 groups based on country of birth: (1) Sweden, (2) immigrants from 'Western' countries (EU25, Norway, Iceland, North America and Oceania) and (3) immigrants from 'non-Western' countries (east Europe, Africa, Asia and South America).
Particularly, immigrants born in non-Western countries had higher levels of morbidity and lower socioeconomic status than natives (p>0.001). No significant differences in the associations between specialised psychiatric and somatic care with regard to subsequent DP were found between immigrants and native Swedes. Being prescribed more than 1 type of psychiatric medication was associated with higher HRs for DP in immigrants from Western (HR 3.34; CI 2.3 to 4.9) and non-Western countries (3.6; 1.9 to 6.4) than in native Swedes (2.55; 2.3 to 2.8) (p=0.003). Low education was a marginally stronger predictor for DP in non-Western immigrants than in native Swedes and Western immigrants (p=0.03).
Morbidity measured by medication, but not by specialised healthcare, was a stronger predictor for DP in immigrants than in native Swedes, warranting scrutiny of differences in care and treatment in immigrants and native Swedes with CMDs.
据报道,患有常见精神障碍(CMD)的移民相比本地居民领取残疾抚恤金(DP)的风险更高;然而,其原因尚未完全明确。本研究旨在调查:(1)患有CMD的瑞典本地人、“西方”和“非西方”移民在发病率(3项指标)和社会经济地位方面的差异;(2)发病率、社会经济地位与移民身份之间关于后续DP的相互作用。
本研究是一项基于全国登记数据的前瞻性队列研究。使用Cox回归(2007 - 2010年)计算粗HR和多变量HR以及95%置信区间。
纳入2006年期间因CMD而有首次病假记录的所有18 - 59岁个体(N = 66097)。研究人群根据出生国家分为3组:(1)瑞典,(2)来自“西方”国家(欧盟25国、挪威、冰岛、北美和大洋洲)的移民,(3)来自“非西方”国家(东欧、非洲、亚洲和南美洲)的移民。
特别是,出生在非西方国家的移民比本地人发病率更高且社会经济地位更低(p > 0.001)。在移民和瑞典本地人之间,未发现专科精神科和躯体护理与后续DP之间的关联存在显著差异。与瑞典本地人(2.55;2.3至2.8)相比,来自西方国家(HR 3.34;CI 2.3至4.9)和非西方国家(3.6;1.9至6.4)的移民被开具超过1种精神科药物与更高的DP风险相关(p = 0.003)。低教育程度对非西方移民DP的预测作用比瑞典本地人和西方移民略强(p = 0.03)。
通过药物而非专科医疗保健衡量的发病率,对移民DP的预测作用比对瑞典本地人更强,这需要对患有CMD的移民和瑞典本地人在护理和治疗方面的差异进行审查。