| Literature DB >> 30537961 |
Kristoffer Halvorsrud1, James Nazroo2, Michaela Otis1, Eva Brown Hajdukova3, Kamaldeep Bhui4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As part of a national programme to tackle ethnic inequalities, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of research on ethnic inequalities in pathways to care for adults with psychosis living in England and/or Wales.Entities:
Keywords: Ethnicity; Meta-analysis; Pathways to care; Psychosis; Severe mental illness; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30537961 PMCID: PMC6290527 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-018-1201-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of searches and screening
Previous meta-analyses on pathways to mental health care in the UK
| Study | Ethnicity categories | GP, | Civil/forensic detention, | Police or CJS, | DUP | AMSTAR quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson et al. 2014 [ | White (reference) | – | – | Total = 7 | ||
| Black Groups | N = 5 studies, OR = 0.66 | Police/CJS: N = 5 studies, OR = 2.14 | ||||
| Asian Groups | N = 3 studies, OR = 1.24 | Police/CJS: N = 3 studies, OR = 0.73 | ||||
| Bhui et al. 2003 [ | White (reference) | – | Total = 9 | |||
| Black | Civil: N = 12 studies, OR = 4.31 | |||||
| Singh et al. 2007 [ | White (reference) | – | Total = 6 | |||
| Black | Civil: N = 15 studies, OR = 4.48 | |||||
| Forensic: N = 2 studies, OR = 2.45 | ||||||
| Asian | Civil: N = 4 studies, OR = 3.42 | |||||
| Singh et al. 2013 [ | Black vs. Non-Black | N = 4 studies, OR = 0.50 | Civil: N = 6 studies, OR = 2.33 | Police/CJS: N = 4 studies, OR = 2.25 | Total = 5 | |
| Black Caribbean vs. White British | Civil: N = 2 studies, OR = 2.88 | |||||
| Asian vs. broadly defined White | Civil: N = 2 studies, OR = 0.59 |
Overview and quality of included primary studies (used in meta-analyses)
| Study | Ethnicity measure | Ethnicity categories (including | Relevant outcomes | Main findings (ethnic minority vs. White ref.) | Quality* (max = 11) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ajnakina et al. [ | Census | WB (62), BA (63), BC (50) | CA (civil), police | Higher CA and police in BA and BC | 7 (moderate) |
| Bebbington et al. [ | N/A | W (190), BC (49) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in BC | 4 (moderate) |
| Banerjee et al. [ | N/A | WE (804), BC (375), O (50) | CA (forensic) | Higher CA in BC | 2 (low) |
| Bhui et al. [ | Place of birth, census | W (184), BA (16), BB(12), BC (26), A/0 (18) | CA (forensic) | Higher CA in BA and BB | 8 (high) |
| Bhui et al. [ | Self-report | W (177), B (160), SA (114), O (29) | GP, CJS, DUP | Higher CJS in BA and BC, non-significant GP and DUP (including SA) | 9 (high) |
| Bhui et al. [ | Census | WB (23), WO (14), BA (28), BC (31), BO (1), Bd (4), In (4), P (3), O (14) | CJS | Higher CJS in BA and BC | 9 (high) |
| Birchwood et al. [ | Third party | WB (74), BC (50), A (30), Ir (5), O (10) | CA (civil), police | Non-significant CA and police (BC and A) | 5 (moderate) |
| Brunet [ | Third party | W (16), B (36), A (28), O (8) | GP, CA (civil), DUP | Shorter DUP, non-significant GP and CA (B and A) | 2 (low) |
| Burnett et al. [ | Place of birth | W (38), BC (38), A (24) | GP, CA (mixed), police/CJS | Non-significant GP, CA and police/CJS (B and A) | 6 (moderate) |
| Callan [ | Place of birth | WB (169), BC (200) | GP, CA (civil), police | Higher CA and police in B, non-significant for GP | 7 (moderate) |
| Cole et al. [ | Self-report, census | W (39), B (38), A/O (16) | GP, CA (civil), police | Non-significant GP, CA and police (B and A/O) | 6 (moderate) |
| Commander et al. 1999 [ | Self-report, census | W (40), B (40), A (40) | GP, CA (civil), police | Higher CA and police (B and A), GP higher in A, non-significant for B | 4 (moderate) |
| Crowley and Simmons [ | Third party | W (75), BC (49), A (28) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in BC, non-significant for A | 3 (low) |
| Davies et al. [ | Place of birth, census | WB (207), WO (36), BA (27), BC (112), O (15) | CA (mixed) | Higher CA (BA and BC), non-significant in WO | 8 (high) |
| Drake et al. [ | Self-report | W (216), BC (19), O (13) | DUP | Non-significant DUP for BC | 6 (moderate) |
| Gajwani et al. [ | Self-report | W (437), BA (62), BC (120), Bd (16), In (47), P (125) | CA (mixed) | Non-significant CA in ethnic minority (including Black) groups | 9 (high) |
| Ghali et al. [ | Census | WB (183), WO (103), BA (136), BB (152), BC (27), SA (80) | GP, CJS, DUP | Higher CJS in BA only, shorter DUP for Black groups and SA, GP non-significant | 11 (high) |
| Goater et al. [ | Self-report, census | W (68), B (71), O (15) | CA (mixed) | Higher CA in B after 5 years (non-significant after only 1 year) | 6 (moderate) |
| Harrison et al. [ | N/A | Non-BC (89), BC (42) | GP, CA (civil), police | Higher CA and police in BC, GP non-significant | 4 (moderate) |
| Ineichen et al. [ | Third party | WB (193), WO (9), BC (43), O (19) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in BC, non-significant for WO | 4 (moderate) |
| Johnson et al. [ | N/A | W (173), BA (15), BC (70), O (14) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in BC, non-significant for BA | 5 (moderate) |
| Koffman et al. [ | Third party | W (2,978), B (631), A (160) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in B and A | 5 (moderate) |
| Lawlor et al. [ | Census | WB (146), WO (45), BA (41), BC (26), BO (29) | GP, CA (civil), police/CJS | Higher CA and police/CJS (Black groups and WO), lower GP (Black groups) non-significant GP (WO) | 10 (high) |
| Lloyd and Moodley [ | Third party | W (101), B (37) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in B | 5 (moderate) |
| Mann et al. [ | Self-report, census | WB (158), WO (93), BA (188), BB (55), BC (78), mixed B/W (36), SA (37), A (O)(29) | GP, CA (civil), CJS | Particularly high point estimate for CA in BA, less marked for other groups and outcomes, or non-significant | 9 (high) |
| McKenzie et al. [ | Place of birth | WB (58), BC (53) | CA (civil), CJS | Higher CA and CJS in BC | 8 (high) |
| Moodley and Perkins [ | N/A | W (25), BC (22) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in BC | 2 (low) |
| Moodley and Thornicroft [ | Third party | W (295), BC (47) | CA (civil), police | Higher CA and police in BC | 3 (low) |
| Morgan et al. [ | Self-report | WB (237), WO (33), BA (64), BC (128) | GP, CA (civil), CJS | Higher CA, CJS, lower GP (BA and BC), non-significant CA, CJS and GP (WO vs. WB) | 9 (high) |
| Morgan et al. [ | Self-report | WB (217), BC (129), BA (68) | DUP | Shorter (BA) and non-significant (BC) DUP | 8 (high) |
| Morgan et al. 2017 [ | Self-report, census | WB (159), BA (44), BC (107) | CA (civil), police | Higher CA and police (BA and BC) | 8 (high) |
| Owens et al. [ | Third party | Non-BC (155), BC (120) | CA (civil), police | Higher CA and police in BC | 4 (moderate) |
| Parkman et al. [ | Place of birth, census | WB (94), WO (17), BC (42) | CA (mixed) | Higher CA in BC, non-significant in WO vs. WB | 7 (moderate) |
| Patrick et al. [ | N/A | W (34), B (26) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in B | 3 (low) |
| Singh et al. [ | Third party, census | W (352), BC (44) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in BC | 8 (high) |
| Singh et al. [ | Third party | W (2,587), B (811), A (430), O (359) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in B, non-significant for A | 7 (moderate) |
| Singh et al. [ | Self-report, census | W (45), B (35), A (43) | CA (civil), CJS, GP, DUP | Higher CA and CJS (B), non-significant GP and DUP (B), non-significant CA, CJS, DUP (A) | 7 (moderate) |
| Takei et al. [ | N/A | W (49), BC (32) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in B | 5 (moderate) |
| Thomas et al. [ | Third party | W (1,265), BC (193), A (76) | CA (civil), police | Higher CA (BC and A), higher police (BC), non-significant police (A) | 3 (low) |
| Weich et al. [ | N/A | W (997,169), B (39,249), A (46,544), mixed (13,781), O (22,053) | CA (civil) | Higher CA in B and A | 2 (low) |
Ethnicity categories: W White, WB White British, WO White Other, Ir Irish, B Black, BA Black African, BB Black British, BC Black Caribbean, BO Black Other, A Asian, SA South Asian, Bd Bangladeshi, In Indian, P Pakistani, O Other
Relevant outcomes: CA compulsory admission (for civil, forensic or mixed (civil and forensic) detentions), CJS criminal justice system involvement, GP general practitioner involvement, DUP duration of untreated psychosis
*The scoring system used to rate primary studies is replicated from Bhui et al. [3]. From a maximum of 11 points, primary studies that received a total of 0–3 points were ranked as ‘low’ quality, 4–7 points ‘moderate’ quality and 8–11 points ‘high’ quality. See Additional file 4 for the full breakdown of the score of each item of the quality assessment system for the respective studies
Fig. 2Compulsory admission by patient type, Black relative to White group. Two effect estimates were entered from Goater et al. [34] as data were recorded after the first and the fifth year for that study
Fig. 3Compulsory admission by patient type, South Asian relative to White group
Fig. 4Police or criminal justice system involvement, Black relative to White group. Three effect estimates were entered from Bhui et al. [25], as these statistics related to different Black groups in that study: 1 = Black Caribbean, 2 = Black African, 3 = Black Other
Fig. 5Police or criminal justice system involvement, South Asian relative to White group. Three effect estimates were entered from Bhui et al. [25], as these statistics related to different South Asian nationalities in that study: Bangladeshi, Indian and Pakistani
Fig. 6General practitioner (GP) involvement, Black relative to White group
Fig. 7General practitioner (GP) involvement, South Asian relative to White group
Fig. 8Duration of untreated psychosis (DUP), Black and South Asian relative to White group