ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY OF PSYCHOSES: Lessons from Nottingham - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY OF PSYCHOSES: Lessons from Nottingham

Description:

ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY OF PSYCHOSES: Lessons from Nottingham Jouko Miettunen Department of Public Health and Primary Care Institute of Public Health – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:55
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 20
Provided by: jam5151
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY OF PSYCHOSES: Lessons from Nottingham


1
ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY OF PSYCHOSES Lessons
from Nottingham
Jouko Miettunen Department of Public Health and
Primary Care Institute of Public
Health University of Cambridge
June 17th, 2003
2
PSYCHOTIC DISORDERS
  • chronic, severe, and disabling brain diseases
  • life-time prevalence approximately
  • 1 in schizophrenia
  • 1 other psychoses
  • more common in urban than in rural areas
  • more common in western countries

3
POSSIBLE ENVIRONMENTAL RISK FACTORS
  • related to urban birth or to upbringing
  • population density
  • stressful life-events
  • air pollution
  • social deprivation
  • temporal order can be the opposite
  • social drift?
  • more healthy people may move out from deprived
    areas?

4
Nottingham Health Authority Area
  • about 600,000 people in 105 electoral wards
  • districts of Nottingham, Ruschliffe, Broxtowe,
    Gedling and Ashfield
  • several previous studies (1969-1988) on
    schizophrenia and other psychoses
  • possible to estimate trends in incidence
  • relatively high social deprivation and incidence
    of schizophrenia

5
SAMPLES OF THE STUDY
  • SIN DATA
  • Schizophrenia Incidence in Nottingham
  • all incidence cases of psychoses in Nottingham
    Health Authority Area 1.6.1992 - 31.5.1994
  • 167 cases (166 with known address)
  • ÆSOP DATA
  • Aetiology and Ethnicity in Schizophrenia and
    Other Psychoses
  • three-centre study (other centres are Bristol and
    South London)
  • all incidence cases of psychoses in Nottingham
    Health Authority Area 1.8.1997 - 31.7.1999
  • 206 cases (202 with known address)

6
INDIVIDUAL VARIABLES
  • DISTRIBUTIONS 1992-94 (N167) 1997-99
    (N206)
  • Gender males 98 (59)
    123 (60)
  • Median age 28
    y 30 y
  • Diagnoses
  • Narrow schizophrenia 56
    67
  • Broad schizophrenia 82
    116
  • Affective psychosis 85
    90
  • Ethnic groups
  • White 122
    (73) 159 (77)
  • African-Caribbean 26 (16)
    26 (13)
  • Other
    19 (11) 21 (10)

7
POPULATION DATA
  • Census 1991 population of Nottingham
  • population at risk (16 to 64 years) 389,389
  • after under-enumeration corrections 399,439
  • till 1992-94 population has increased
    approximately 2 and till 1997-99 approximately
    6 from this estimate

8
ELECTORAL WARD LEVEL VARIABLES
  • Multiple Deprivation Index 2000
  • Income
  • Employment
  • Housing
  • Health deprivation and disability
  • Education, skills and training
  • Geographical access to services
  • population density
  • proportion of ethnic minorities

9
HYPOTHESES OF THE STUDY
  • Incidence of psychoses is higher in more deprived
    areas (and/or in areas with higher population
    density)
  • Incidence of psychoses among ethnic minorities is
    relatively higher in areas with lower proportion
    of ethnic minorities
  • lack of social support?

10
CASES 1992-94
Deprivation High to low
11
CASES 1997-99
Deprivation High to low
12
ANNUAL INCIDENCE OF ALL PSYCHOSES BY SOCIAL
DEPRIVATION NOTTINGHAM 1992-1994
13
ANNUAL INCIDENCE OF ALL PSYCHOSES BY SOCIAL
DEPRIVATION NOTTINGHAM 1997-1999
250
204
200
167
I (high)
136
150
128
II
III
100
70
69
64
IV (low)
53
39
50
29
22
20
20
19
18
16
0
ALL
white
afro-c.
others
14
PLAN FOR ANALYSES
  • Age-standardised rates (Nottingham as a standard)
  • Two studies separately and pooled
  • Results by
  • Sex
  • Ethnic group
  • Subdiagnoses
  • narrow schz, broad schz and affective psychosis
  • each of the six variables in the deprivation
    score
  • Poisson regression analyses

15
LIMITATIONS
  • Electoral ward as a unit?
  • Case-ascertainment?
  • Census population?
  • Social deprivation scores?
  • analyses can be repeated with other scores
  • Causality?

16
FUTURE WORK (1)
  • Smaller units than electoral wards
  • enumeration districts (no information on
    ethnicity)
  • using e.g. principal component analysis
  • Census 2001 variables are soon available
  • update all the analyses with new population data
  • update all the the analyses with new social
    deprivation variables
  • combinations of census 1991 and 2001 variables

17
FUTURE WORK (2)
  • Case-control study of ÆSOP
  • multilevel analyses with individual level
    variables e.g. social class
  • ÆSOP is a three-centre study
  • replicate the analyses in Bristol and South London

18
CONCLUSIONS
  • Preliminary findings
  • incidence of schizophrenia is about 1.5 more
    common in the most deprived areas

19
CONCLUSIONS
  • Preliminary findings
  • incidence of schizophrenia is about 1.5 more
    common in the most deprived areas
  • Much more work is needed in this thesis and also
    elsewhere to study social deprivation and
    incidence of psychoses
  • All your comments will be very helpful
  • Thank You!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com