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Psychotic experiences: disadvantaged and different from the norm

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Jim van Os*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, School of Mental Health and Neuroscience, Maastricht University Medical Centre, PO Box 616 (DRT 10), 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands, email: j.vanos@maastrichtuniversity.nl, and King's College London, King's Health Partners, Department of Psychosis Studies, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK
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Summary

Stress-induced alterations in how a person attributes meaning to internal and external stimuli may represent the first step in explaining how population ethnic minority–majority interactions affect mental health. Cross-context and diagnostic assumption-free research is required to elucidate how the wider social environment interacts with personal characteristics to increase expression of psychosis.

Type
Editorials
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2012 

The incidence of schizophrenia does not have a clear social class gradient and is not associated with poverty. There is, however, strong evidence for associations with childhood victimisation Reference Varese, Smeets, Drukker, Lieverse, Lataster and Viechtbauer1 and ethnic minority status. Reference Bourque, van der Ven and Malla2 Thus, victimised individuals and ethnic minority populations at risk of discrimination and exclusion have higher rates of service use for syndromes that in DSM are conceptualised as psychotic disorder. In addition, these populations also display higher rates of (subclinical) psychotic experiences, regardless of service use and traditional diagnostic boundaries. Reference Linscott and Van Os3

Although initially it was thought that experience of migration contributed to the observed increase in risk in ethnic minority populations, evidence suggests that the mechanism of risk may be different, pointing to the importance of the degree to which a person at risk of discrimination and exclusion is the exception in relation to the wider social environment.

To summarise the evidence that ‘being the exception’ rather than experience of migration per se may underlie the high rates of psychotic symptoms and disorders in ethnic minority populations at risk of discrimination and exclusion:

  1. (a) the increase in risk persists into second-generation migrants without personal history of migration; Reference Bourque, van der Ven and Malla2

  2. (b) the increase in risk is also observed in stable ethnic minority populations that migrated centuries ago; Reference Bresnahan, Begg, Brown, Schaefer, Sohler and Insel4

  3. (c) if migration involves a change from social exclusion to social inclusion, no increase in risk is observed; Reference Corcoran, Perrin, Harlap, Deutsch, Fennig and Manor5

  4. (d) there is progressively greater increase in risk with more visible minority status; Reference Bourque, van der Ven and Malla2

  5. (e) the risk for clinical psychotic syndromes in ethnic minority populations is lower in areas of high own-group density. Reference Boydell, Van Os, McKenzie, Allardyce, Goel and McCreadie6,Reference Veling, Susser, van Os, Mackenbach, Selten and Hoek7

What mediates ethnic density associations?

The findings summarised above represent a good example of the ‘relativity’ of relative risks, Reference Neeleman8 as the increase in risk associated with ethnic minority status is contingent on social context – a phenomenon known as ecological effect modification. The fact that the strength of the relative risk for psychotic disorder varies inversely with the prevalence of the risk factor in question – minority status – may be indicative of selection (e.g. individuals of ethnic minority most at risk form a specific cluster geographically) or causation (e.g. higher levels of own-group density confer a risk-decreasing buffering effect). It is difficult to distinguish between these two mechanisms, as this requires extensive and sophisticated cross-context comparisons that are difficult to conduct – particularly across cultural groups – given that schizophrenia represents a rare and variably defined mental disorder that typically is identified on the basis of service contact data. In this issue of the Journal, Das-Munshi and colleagues present fascinating evidence that density associations may in fact represent a combination of risk-increasing and protective mechanisms, using a subclinical psychosis outcome (defined as one or more psychotic experiences measured with the Psychosis Screening Questionnaire – PSQ) that was independent of service use and not prone to cultural bias in diagnosis. Reference Das-Munshi, Bécares, Boydell, Dewey, Morgan and Stansfeld9 Their findings, summarised in Fig. 1, suggest that lower own-group density may result in greater exposure to psychosis-inducing social adversity, and that although a risk-buffering effect of higher own-group density exists, this may be moderated by the level of strains and supportive relationships a person has.

FIG. 1 Results presented by Das-Munshi et al. Reference Das-Munshi, Bécares, Boydell, Dewey, Morgan and Stansfeld9

Three associations (A1–A3) and one interaction (Int1) were demonstrated across areas with different levels of own-group ethnic density. First, for a given individual who is a member of a minority ethnic group, the level of subclincial psychotic experiences was greater when living in a neighbourhood with lower own-group density, independent of social class, education and area deprivation (A1). Second, with decreasing own-group density, ethnic minority groups generally were more likely to report greater discrimination, poorer social support and more chronic strains (A2). Third, greater levels of racism, discrimination, chronic strains and difficulties, and lower level of social support, were associated with previous year psychotic experiences (A3). Finally, the protective effect of higher own-group density may be reduced in people experiencing chronic strains, and enhanced in people reporting high levels of practical or confiding/emotional support (Int1).

What outcome do psychotic experiences represent?

The findings presented by Das-Munshi et al differ from previous work in one important aspect, namely the outcome under study. Psychotic experiences as measured by the PSQ are not ‘schizophrenia light’. Rather, they represent a dimensional phenotype indexing aberrant attribution of salience that is prevalent in the general population (prevalence 8%), Reference Linscott and Van Os3 substantially more prevalent in common mental disorder (anxiety and depression; prevalence 30%) Reference Wigman, van Nierop, Vollebergh, Lieb, Beesdo-Baum and Wittchen10 and universal in psychotic disorder. In the general population, psychotic experiences predict an increase in risk for transition to psychotic and (to a lesser degree) non-psychotic disorder at an annual rate of 0.6%; Reference Kaymaz, Drukker, Lieb, Wittchen, Werbeloff and Weiser11 in common mental disorder, they have a negative impact on course and outcome (see Appendix). Reference Wigman, van Nierop, Vollebergh, Lieb, Beesdo-Baum and Wittchen10,Reference Perlis, Uher, Ostacher, Goldberg, Trivedi and Rush12 Thus, the increase in risk for psychotic experiences associated with lower own-group density in part may mediate the association with schizophrenia demonstrated in previous work. Reference Boydell, Van Os, McKenzie, Allardyce, Goel and McCreadie6,Reference Veling, Susser, van Os, Mackenbach, Selten and Hoek7 However, Das-Munshi et al's findings also suggest that the impact of lower own-group density extends dimensionally to an extended psychosis phenotype of aberrant salience with relevance for (a) behavioural expression of risk in the general population and (b) course and outcome of common mental disorder. The findings therefore concur with recent meta-analytic work, for example in the area of childhood victimisation, Reference Varese, Smeets, Drukker, Lieverse, Lataster and Viechtbauer1 that indicates that the environment may have an impact on dimensional expression of a specific domain of psychopathology that extends across traditional disorder boundaries.

Conclusions

The findings presented by Das-Munshi et al provide, for the first time, an indication of how the wider social environment, indexed by variation in own-group ethnic density, may interact with personal characteristics in predicting alterations in mental health in disadvantaged populations. By moving away from traditional diagnostic categories that are lacking in validity, more room is created for active interpretation of the data. How communities interact with minority ethnic groups has public health implications; however, the relative protective effect of being a member of the majority group still depends on the quality of supportive relationships one has. Stress-induced alterations in how a person attributes meaning to internal and external stimuli may represent the first step in explaining how population ethnic minority–majority interactions affect mental health.

Appendix

Extended psychosis phenotype: meta-analytic findings Reference Linscott and Van Os3,Reference Kaymaz, Drukker, Lieb, Wittchen, Werbeloff and Weiser11,Reference Van Os, Linscott, Myin-Germeys, Delespaul and Krabbendam13 to date

  1. Prevalence around 7.5%, incidence around 2.5%; however, a substantial amount of the considerable heterogeneity in rates of psychotic experiences across studies is due to study method, cohort and design factors

  2. Associated with family history psychotic disorder, childhood trauma, cannabis use, ethnic minority status, unemployment, low income, younger age

  3. Prevalent in disorders of anxiety and depression predicting worse out-come and a more psychotic disorder risk profile as well as demographic profile

  4. The 2- to 5-year persistence rate is about 20–30%

  5. Persistence is influenced by genetic and environmental factors

  6. Psychotic experiences predict onset of later psychotic and (to a lesser degree) non-psychotic disorder and admission to hospital (at a rate of 0.6% per year), particularly if persistent

  7. Other factors associated with transition to psychotic and non-psychotic disorder are: baseline severity of psychotic experiences, level of admixture with affective dysregulation and motivational impairment, social functioning and coping level.

References

1 Varese, F, Smeets, F, Drukker, M, Lieverse, R, Lataster, T, Viechtbauer, W, et al. Childhood adversities increase the risk of psychosis: a meta-analysis of patient–control, prospective- and cross-sectional cohort studies. Schizophr Bull 2012; 38: 661–71.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2 Bourque, F, van der Ven, E, Malla, A. A meta-analysis of the risk for psychotic disorders among first- and second-generation immigrants. Psychol Med 2011; 41: 897910.Google Scholar
3 Linscott, RJ, Van Os, J. An updated and conservative systematic review and meta-analysis of epidemiological evidence on psychotic experiences in children and adults: on the pathway from proneness to persistence to dimensional expression across mental disorders. Psychol Med 2012; 13 July. Epub ahead of print (doi: 10.1192/S0033291712001626).Google Scholar
4 Bresnahan, M, Begg, MD, Brown, A, Schaefer, C, Sohler, N, Insel, B, et al. Race and risk of schizophrenia in a US birth cohort: another example of health disparity? Int J Epidemiol 2007; 36: 751–8.Google Scholar
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6 Boydell, J, Van Os, J, McKenzie, K, Allardyce, J, Goel, R, McCreadie, RG, et al. Incidence of schizophrenia in ethnic minorities in London: ecological study into interactions with environment. BMJ 2001; 323: 1336.Google Scholar
7 Veling, W, Susser, E, van Os, J, Mackenbach, JP, Selten, JP, Hoek, HW. Ethnic density of neighborhoods and incidence of psychotic disorders among immigrants. Am J Psychiatry 2008; 165: 6673.Google Scholar
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Figure 0

FIG. 1 Results presented by Das-Munshi et al.9Three associations (A1–A3) and one interaction (Int1) were demonstrated across areas with different levels of own-group ethnic density. First, for a given individual who is a member of a minority ethnic group, the level of subclincial psychotic experiences was greater when living in a neighbourhood with lower own-group density, independent of social class, education and area deprivation (A1). Second, with decreasing own-group density, ethnic minority groups generally were more likely to report greater discrimination, poorer social support and more chronic strains (A2). Third, greater levels of racism, discrimination, chronic strains and difficulties, and lower level of social support, were associated with previous year psychotic experiences (A3). Finally, the protective effect of higher own-group density may be reduced in people experiencing chronic strains, and enhanced in people reporting high levels of practical or confiding/emotional support (Int1).

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