Literature DB >> 9519067

First episodes of psychosis in Afro-Caribbean and White people. An 18-year follow-up population-based study.

N Takei1, R Persaud, P Woodruff, I Brockington, R M Murray.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There have been few prospective studies of the long-term outcome of psychosis in people of Afro-Caribbean origin in the UK.
METHOD: We followed-up a population-based, consecutive series of 34 Afro-Caribbean and 54 White people with psychosis who had been extensively investigated during their first admission in 1973/74. Diagnoses were made by direct interview using the Present State Examination at both first admission and follow-up.
RESULTS: Ninety-seven percent of the original sample were traced. A slightly greater proportion of the Afro-Caribbean people were assigned to the S+ Catego class (schizophrenia), both on first assessment and at follow-up. No difference was found between the two groups in the consistency of diagnosis over the 18 years or in the proportion of patients considered psychotic but Afro-Caribbean people tended to have fewer negative symptoms at follow-up. There were striking differences between the two groups in their experience of psychiatric care; Afro-Caribbean people were more likely to have been readmitted, to have experienced longer hospitalisations, and to have undergone more involuntary admissions than their White counterparts.
CONCLUSIONS: Afro-Caribbean people who met clinical and research criteria for schizophrenia had a less satisfactory experience of, and response to, psychiatric care over 18 years than their White counterparts.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9519067     DOI: 10.1192/bjp.172.2.147

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Psychiatry        ISSN: 0007-1250            Impact factor:   9.319


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