Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, Bologna Transcultural Psychosomatic Team (BoTPT), University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Department of Mental Health and Pathological Addiction, Local Health Authority, Bologna, Italy.
Psychol Med. 2022 Oct;52(14):2972-2984. doi: 10.1017/S003329172000495X. Epub 2021 Feb 10.
Psychosis rates are higher among some migrant groups. We hypothesized that psychosis in migrants is associated with cumulative social disadvantage during different phases of migration.
We used data from the EUropean Network of National Schizophrenia Networks studying Gene-Environment Interactions (EU-GEI) case-control study. We defined a set of three indicators of social disadvantage for each phase: pre-migration, migration and post-migration. We examined whether social disadvantage in the pre- and post-migration phases, migration adversities, and mismatch between achievements and expectations differed between first-generation migrants with first-episode psychosis and healthy first-generation migrants, and tested whether this accounted for differences in odds of psychosis in multivariable logistic regression models.
In total, 249 cases and 219 controls were assessed. Pre-migration (OR 1.61, 95% CI 1.06-2.44, = 0.027) and post-migration social disadvantages (OR 1.89, 95% CI 1.02-3.51, = 0.044), along with expectations/achievements mismatch (OR 1.14, 95% CI 1.03-1.26, = 0.014) were all significantly associated with psychosis. Migration adversities (OR 1.18, 95% CI 0.672-2.06, = 0.568) were not significantly related to the outcome. Finally, we found a dose-response effect between the number of adversities across all phases and odds of psychosis (⩾6: OR 14.09, 95% CI 2.06-96.47, = 0.007).
The cumulative effect of social disadvantages before, during and after migration was associated with increased odds of psychosis in migrants, independently of ethnicity or length of stay in the country of arrival. Public health initiatives that address the social disadvantages that many migrants face during the whole migration process and post-migration psychological support may reduce the excess of psychosis in migrants.
某些移民群体的精神病发病率较高。我们假设移民中的精神病与移民不同阶段的累积社会劣势有关。
我们使用了欧盟网络研究基因-环境相互作用的国家精神分裂症网络(EU-GEI)病例对照研究的数据。我们为每个阶段定义了一组三个社会劣势指标:移民前、移民中和移民后。我们研究了第一代移民中首次出现精神病和健康的第一代移民之间在移民前和移民后的社会劣势、移民逆境以及成就与期望之间的不匹配是否存在差异,并在多变量逻辑回归模型中检验了这是否解释了精神病发病几率的差异。
共评估了 249 例病例和 219 例对照。移民前(OR 1.61,95%CI 1.06-2.44, = 0.027)和移民后(OR 1.89,95%CI 1.02-3.51, = 0.044)社会劣势以及期望/成就不匹配(OR 1.14,95%CI 1.03-1.26, = 0.014)均与精神病显著相关。移民逆境(OR 1.18,95%CI 0.672-2.06, = 0.568)与结果无显著相关性。最后,我们发现所有阶段的逆境数量与精神病发病几率之间存在剂量-反应关系(≥6:OR 14.09,95%CI 2.06-96.47, = 0.007)。
移民前、期间和移民后的社会劣势累积效应与移民中精神病发病几率增加有关,与族裔或在抵达国的居住时间无关。针对许多移民在整个移民过程中和移民后所面临的社会劣势的公共卫生举措以及移民后的心理支持可能会降低移民中的精神病发病率。