Article
Cumulative social disadvantage, ethnicity and first-episode psychosis: a case-control study.
NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, and Centre for Public Mental Health, Health Service and Population Research Department, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London, UK.
Psychological Medicine (impact factor:
6.16).
01/2009;
38(12):1701-15.
DOI:10.1017/S0033291708004534
pp.1701-15
Source: PubMed
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Citations (0)
- Cited In (1)
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Article: The epidemiology of schizophrenia: replacing dogma with knowledge.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Major advances have been made in our understanding of the epidemiology of schizophrenia. We now know that the disorder is more common and severe in young men, and that the incidence varies geographically and temporally. Risk factors have been elucidated; biological risks include a family history of the disorder, advanced paternal age, obstetric complications, and abuse of drugs such as stimulants and cannabis. In addition, recent research has also identified social risk factors such as being born and brought up in a city, migration, and certain types of childhood adversity such as physical abuse and bullying, as well as social isolation and adverse events in adult life. Current research is focussing on the significance of minor psychotic symptoms in the general population, gene-environmental interaction, and how risk factors impact on pathogenesis; perhaps all risk factors ultimately impact on striatal dopamine as the final common pathway.Dialogues in clinical neuroscience 01/2010; 12(3):305-15.
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Keywords
affective diagnosis
Black Caribbean
Black Caribbean population
Black Caribbean subjects
community controls
concentrated disadvantage
empirical studies
first episode
greater prevalence
healthy controls
Numerous studies
potential confounders
Recent speculation
short duration
Similar patterns
social disadvantage
social variables
specific indicators
two main ethnic groups
untreated psychosis