Author/Authors :
Wim Veling، نويسنده , , Hans W. Hoek، نويسنده , , Johan P. Mackenbach، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background Previous studies have
reported a very high incidence of schizophrenia for
immigrant ethnic groups in Western Europe. The
explanation of these findings is unknown, but is likely
to involve social stress inherent to the migrant condition.
A previous study reported that the incidence
of schizophrenia in ethnic groups was higher when
these groups perceived more discrimination. We
conducted a case-control study of first-episode
schizophrenia, and investigated whether perceived
discrimination at the individual level is a risk factor
for schizophrenia. Methods Cases included all nonwestern
immigrants who made first contact with a
physician for a psychotic disorder in The Hague, the
Netherlands, between October 2000 and July 2005,
and received a diagnosis of a schizophrenia spectrum
disorder (DSM IV: schizophrenia, schizophreniform
disorder, schizoaffective disorder) (N = 100). Two
matched control groups were recruited, one among
immigrants who made contact with non-psychiatric
secondary health care services (N = 100), and one
among siblings of the cases (N = 63). Perceived discrimination
in the year before illness onset was
measured with structured interviews, assessing experiences
of prejudice, racist insults or attacks, and
perception of discrimination against one’s ethnic
group. Conditional logistic regression analyses were
used to predict schizophrenia as a function of perceived
discrimination. Results Cases reported somewhat
higher rates of perceived discrimination in the
year prior to illness onset than their siblings and the
general-hospital controls, but these differences were
not statistically significant; 52% of the cases and 42%
of both control groups had perceived any discrimination.
Perceived discrimination at the individual
level was not a risk factor for schizophrenia in these
data. Perceived discrimination was positively correlated
with cultural distance and cannabis use, and
negatively with ethnic identity, self-esteem, and
mastery. Conclusions The relationship between racial
discrimination and psychosis may vary with the
aspect of discrimination that is studied, and may also
depend upon the social context in which discrimination
takes place