| Literature DB >> 30564447 |
Andrea Tortelli1, Aurélie Nakamura2, Federico Suprani3, Franck Schürhoff4, Judith Van der Waerden5, Andrei Szöke6, Ilaria Tarricone3, Baptiste Pignon7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is well established that migration and ethnic minority status are risk factors for psychotic disorders. Recent studies have aimed to determine if they are also associated with subclinical psychosis (psychotic-like experiences and schizotypal traits). AIMS: We aimed to determine to what extent migrant and ethnic minority groups are associated with higher risk of subclinical psychosis.Entities:
Keywords: Migrants; ethnic minorities; psychosis continuum; psychotic-like experiences; subclinical psychosis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30564447 PMCID: PMC6293451 DOI: 10.1192/bjo.2018.68
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJPsych Open ISSN: 2056-4724
Fig. 1Flow diagram (selection strategy) of selected studies.
PLE, psychotic-like experiences.
Studies on schizotypal traits: characteristics and findings
| Author/year | Country | Instrument | Setting | Ethnic/migrant groups | Findings | Quality assesment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kelley | USA | 11 scales | 316 | Male College students | White, Black, Asians | Overall effect of ethnicity (p < 0.001). Asians showed higher scores than White and Black. No differences between White and Black | 7 |
| Poreh | USA | Chapman | 852 | College students | Afro-American, European American | No statistically significant differences were found between African-American and European-American, except on the Perceptual Aberration Scale (p < 0.01) which seems mediated by the subjects' gender and socioeconomic background. | 12 |
| Chmielewski | USA | Chapman | 7691 | College students | Caucasian, African American, Asian American, Latino | Caucasian showed the lowest scores, Asian the highest for magical ideation and perceptual aberration, Blacks the highest scores of social anhedonia | 11 |
| Sharpley | UK | O-LIFE/ PDI | 12 | General population | African Caribbean | No effect of ethnicity in scores of O-LIFE. | 10 |
| Kwapil | USA | Chapman | 6137 | College students | Caucasian, African American | Higher scores in African American than in Caucasian, mainly in social and physical anhedonia | 15 |
| Schiffman | USA (Hawaii) | SPQ-B | 353 | College students | Caucasian, Asian, mixed ethnicity | No significant differences in total scores between ethnic groups although differences between scales (interpersonal scale) | 8 |
| Cohen | USA | SPQ | 1395 | College students | White, African American, Asian American, Hispanic, other | Significant difference in total score for Asians. Differences between scales for african Americans (disorganised) and Asian (negative symptoms) | 16 |
| Goulding | USA | SPQ | 825 | College students | White caucasian, black African, Asian American | African American the lowest perceptual disorganisation, Caucasian showed lower social anhedonia | 15 |
| Cicero (2015) | USA (Hawaii) | SPQ | 1239 | College students | Asian, Pacific islander, white, multi-ethnic | Differences between scales, trend to lower scores among White and higher scores among Pacific Islander. | 11 |
Fig. 2Forest plot of studies on lifetime psychotic-like experiences, by tool and ethnicity, using random effects meta- analysis, crude odds ratios, and 95% confidence intervals.
CIDI, Composite International Diagnostic Interview.
Fig. 3Forest plot of studies on current psychotic-like experiences, by tool and ethnicity, using random effects meta-analysis, crude odds ratios, and 95% confidence intervals.
ASR, Adult Self Report; CIDI, Composite International Diagnostic Interview; PSQ, Psychosis Screening Questionnaire.