Author/Authors :
Barbara Lay، نويسنده , , Carlos Nordt، نويسنده , , Wulf Ro¨ssler، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Purpose This epidemiological study aims
to assess the utilisation of inpatient psychiatric services
by immigrants. Specifically, we address the question of
gender-specific differences in immigrants and compare
the population-based rates of males and females from
different countries of origin. Methods We analysed
inpatient admission rates from a defined catchment
area over a 6-year period by means of psychiatric register
data. Poisson regression analysis was used to
model effects of gender, age and country group
(immigrants grouped into six categories according to
their country of origin). Results Of the total of 28,511
subjects consecutively referred to psychiatric inpatient
treatment, 4,814 were foreign nationals (16.9%).
Among immigrants the proportion of female inpatients
(38.7%) was far lower than in the general population
(45.6%; equal proportion of female-to-total among
Swiss inpatients). Immigrants were 37.4 years old on
average at index admission (Swiss people: 46.3 years),
but there were considerable differences across country
groups. We found three groups with particularly high
admission rates: male immigrants originating from
Turkey, Eastern European and ‘Other’ countries (rates
>6 per 1,000 population/year). These were admitted as
inpatients at far higher rates than females from the
same countries. In women, there was no immigrant
group utilising inpatient treatment at a higher level
than Swiss females. The rates of inpatient admission in
males and females was almost equal among the Swiss
(4.3 per 1,000), as was the case for immigrants from
Southern, Western/Northern Europe and former
Yugoslavia, although on a lower level (2.26–3.15 per
1,000). Regression analysis further suggests that
country effects and age effects are different for males
and females, and age effects are specific to the country
of origin. Discussion These gender- and interaction
effects point to inequalities in psychiatric service use in
people with different migration background. Further
research is needed, particularly to understand the
reasons for the markedly different gender-specific
utilisation of psychiatric services by some immigrant
groups.