Schizophrenia, social class and immigrant status: the epidemiological evidence

Epidemiol Psichiatr Soc. 2005 Jul-Sep;14(3):137-44. doi: 10.1017/s1121189x00006382.

Abstract

Background: By the mid-1960s, the importance of socio-economic status for schizophrenia had been demonstrated in terms of differences between social-class groups in prevalence and incidence rates, illness course and outcome, and treatment experience. In the causation-selection debate, however, opinion had swung in favour of the selection hypothesis.

Aims: To reassess evidence on the social-class distribution of schizophrenia in Britain, and to compare this body of research with population-based studies of schizophrenia risk in socially disadvantaged ethnic minorities.

Method: Systematic review of medical and psychological data-bases.

Results: Epidemiological research, while confirming the importance of premorbid social decline, has also provided support for the environmental 'breeder' hypothesis. High psychosis rates have been confirmed in ethnic minorities; in particular among Afro-Caribbean and other Black immigrants whose low social status cannot be accounted for by selective downward social drift or segregation.

Conclusions: There are striking parallels, both in the epidemiology of schizophrenia and in social characteristics, between the lower-class indigenous groups highlighted by earlier psychiatric surveys and African-Caribbean populations in Britain's inner cities today. These similarities underline the need for a broader perspective in the search for environmental risk factors.

MeSH terms

  • Emigration and Immigration*
  • Ethnicity / statistics & numerical data
  • Humans
  • Schizophrenia / epidemiology
  • Schizophrenia / ethnology*
  • Social Class*
  • United States / epidemiology