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Association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study

BACKGROUND: Elevated risk of psychotic disorders in migrant groups is a public mental health priority. We investigated whether living in areas of high own-region migrant density was associated with reduced risk of psychotic disorders among migrants and their children, and whether generation status,...

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Autores principales: Dykxhoorn, Jennifer, Lewis, Glyn, Hollander, Anna-Clara, Kirkbride, James B, Dalman, Christina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7083220/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32145763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2215-0366(20)30059-6
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author Dykxhoorn, Jennifer
Lewis, Glyn
Hollander, Anna-Clara
Kirkbride, James B
Dalman, Christina
author_facet Dykxhoorn, Jennifer
Lewis, Glyn
Hollander, Anna-Clara
Kirkbride, James B
Dalman, Christina
author_sort Dykxhoorn, Jennifer
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Elevated risk of psychotic disorders in migrant groups is a public mental health priority. We investigated whether living in areas of high own-region migrant density was associated with reduced risk of psychotic disorders among migrants and their children, and whether generation status, probable visible minority status, or region-of-origin affected this relationship. METHODS: We used the Swedish registers to identify migrants and their children born between Jan 1, 1982, and Dec 31, 1996, and living in Sweden on or after their 15th birthday. We tracked all included participants from age 15 years or date of migration until emigration, death, or study end (Dec 31, 2016). The outcome was an ICD-10 diagnosis of non-affective psychosis (F20–29). We calculated own-region and generation-specific own-region density within the 9208 small areas for market statistics neighbourhoods in Sweden, and estimated the relationship between density and diagnosis of non-affective psychotic disorders using multilevel Cox proportional hazards models, adjusting for individual confounders (generation status, age, sex, calendar year, lone dwelling, and time since migration [migrants only]), family confounders (family income, family unemployment, and social welfare), and neighbourhood confounders (deprivation index, population density, and proportion of lone dwellings), and using the Akaike information criterion (AIC) to compare model fit. FINDINGS: Of 468 223 individuals included in the final cohort, 4582 (1·0%) had non-affective psychotic disorder. Lower own-region migrant density was associated with increased risk of psychotic disorders among migrants (hazard ratio [HR] 1·05, 95% CI 1·02–1·07 per 5% decrease) and children of migrants (1·03, 1·01–1·06), after adjustment. These effects were stronger for probable visible minority migrants (1·07, 1·04–1·11), including migrants from Asia (1·42, 1·15–1·76) and sub-Saharan Africa (1·28, 1·15–1·44), but not migrants from probable non-visible minority backgrounds (0·99, 0·94–1·04). Among migrants, adding generation status to the measure of own-region density provided a better fit to the data than overall own-region migrant density (AIC 36 103 vs 36 106, respectively), with a 5% decrease in generation-specific migrant density corresponding to a HR of 1·07 (1·04–1·11). INTERPRETATION: Migrant density was associated with non-affective psychosis risk in migrants and their children. Stronger protective effects of migrant density were found for probable visible minority migrants and migrants from Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. For migrants, this risk intersected with generation status. Together, these results suggest that this health inequality is socially constructed. FUNDING: Wellcome Trust, Royal Society, Mental Health Research UK, University College London, National Institute for Health Research, Swedish Research Council, and FORTE.
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spelling pubmed-70832202020-04-01 Association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study Dykxhoorn, Jennifer Lewis, Glyn Hollander, Anna-Clara Kirkbride, James B Dalman, Christina Lancet Psychiatry Article BACKGROUND: Elevated risk of psychotic disorders in migrant groups is a public mental health priority. We investigated whether living in areas of high own-region migrant density was associated with reduced risk of psychotic disorders among migrants and their children, and whether generation status, probable visible minority status, or region-of-origin affected this relationship. METHODS: We used the Swedish registers to identify migrants and their children born between Jan 1, 1982, and Dec 31, 1996, and living in Sweden on or after their 15th birthday. We tracked all included participants from age 15 years or date of migration until emigration, death, or study end (Dec 31, 2016). The outcome was an ICD-10 diagnosis of non-affective psychosis (F20–29). We calculated own-region and generation-specific own-region density within the 9208 small areas for market statistics neighbourhoods in Sweden, and estimated the relationship between density and diagnosis of non-affective psychotic disorders using multilevel Cox proportional hazards models, adjusting for individual confounders (generation status, age, sex, calendar year, lone dwelling, and time since migration [migrants only]), family confounders (family income, family unemployment, and social welfare), and neighbourhood confounders (deprivation index, population density, and proportion of lone dwellings), and using the Akaike information criterion (AIC) to compare model fit. FINDINGS: Of 468 223 individuals included in the final cohort, 4582 (1·0%) had non-affective psychotic disorder. Lower own-region migrant density was associated with increased risk of psychotic disorders among migrants (hazard ratio [HR] 1·05, 95% CI 1·02–1·07 per 5% decrease) and children of migrants (1·03, 1·01–1·06), after adjustment. These effects were stronger for probable visible minority migrants (1·07, 1·04–1·11), including migrants from Asia (1·42, 1·15–1·76) and sub-Saharan Africa (1·28, 1·15–1·44), but not migrants from probable non-visible minority backgrounds (0·99, 0·94–1·04). Among migrants, adding generation status to the measure of own-region density provided a better fit to the data than overall own-region migrant density (AIC 36 103 vs 36 106, respectively), with a 5% decrease in generation-specific migrant density corresponding to a HR of 1·07 (1·04–1·11). INTERPRETATION: Migrant density was associated with non-affective psychosis risk in migrants and their children. Stronger protective effects of migrant density were found for probable visible minority migrants and migrants from Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. For migrants, this risk intersected with generation status. Together, these results suggest that this health inequality is socially constructed. FUNDING: Wellcome Trust, Royal Society, Mental Health Research UK, University College London, National Institute for Health Research, Swedish Research Council, and FORTE. Elsevier 2020-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7083220/ /pubmed/32145763 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2215-0366(20)30059-6 Text en © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dykxhoorn, Jennifer
Lewis, Glyn
Hollander, Anna-Clara
Kirkbride, James B
Dalman, Christina
Association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study
title Association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study
title_full Association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study
title_fullStr Association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study
title_short Association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study
title_sort association of neighbourhood migrant density and risk of non-affective psychosis: a national, longitudinal cohort study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7083220/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32145763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2215-0366(20)30059-6
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