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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2020
This presentation will highlight how the early phase of major mental illness may provide a critical window of opportunity in which to prevent future life-restricting and life-shortening physical comorbidities.
Despite many recent advances in our understanding of severe mental illnesses, those affected still lose 15–20 years of life on average compared to the general population. Most premature deaths arise from the same common disorders that affect the general population such as cardiovascular disease, infections and cancers. Of these cardiovascular diseases is now the single biggest cause, far greater than suicide. Shockingly the mortality gap is still widening as the reduction in CVD morbidity and mortality seen in the general population over the last three decades continues to elude people with severe mental illnesses, for whom the prevalence of CVD, obesity and diabetes are now of epidemic proportion.
And yet, much of this epidemic can be predicted. High rates of tobacco use, physical inactivity and poor nutrition point to underlying health inequalities. Furthermore, initiation of antipsychotic treatment is associated with aggressive weight gain and metabolic disturbance from the early phase of psychosis, and yet often these adverse effects remain unmonitored and untreated.
This presentation will argue that these potentially modifiable risk factors provide natural targets for prevention from the onset of psychosis and its treatment. Extending the early intervention paradigm to embrace a far more holistic body & mind approach is overdue.
The author has not supplied his declaration of competing interest.
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