Abstract
Markedly raised incidence rates of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders have been observed in several migrant and ethnic minority groups. To contribute to a better understanding of the elevated risk for psychotic disorders that is conferred by migration status, the present study examined effects associated with migration risk status on schizotypal personality traits, which are thought to reflect an underlying vulnerability to psychotic disorder. Effects of migration status were also compared to effects associated with a family history of psychopathology, which represents a robust nonspecific risk factor. We assessed schizotypal traits, using the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ), in a community-based sample of 62 Moroccan migrants and 41 Dutch nonmigrants, who were classified by the presence or absence of a family history of psychopathology. Overall, Moroccan migrants obtained higher SPQ scores than Dutch nonmigrants. However, migrants who had been classified as having a familial load of psychopathology displayed higher SPQ scores than migrants without such a family history, who in turn did not differ from Dutch nonmigrants. Furthermore, migrants with a familial load, relative to migrants without such a family history, reported higher levels of substance use and feelings of anxiety or depression, and perceived more often ethnic discrimination, which closely paralleled their SPQ scores. These findings indicate that primarily those migrants who are both intrinsically vulnerable and chronically exposed to social adversity, particularly ethnic discrimination, are at elevated risk for psychotic and other disorders. The results add to the evidence that migration status and perceived discrimination are associated with mental health.
Highlights
Raised incidence rates of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders have been observed in several migrant and ethnic minority groups
Significant main effects of FH were observed for the total Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ) score, SPQ1 (Cognitive-Perceptual Deficits) factor score, and SPQ2 (Interpersonal Deficits) factor score (Tables 2 and 3), reflecting that participants who had been classified as family history of psychopathology (FHP), averaged across both migrant groups, displayed higher scores than participants who were classified as FHN (e.g., Total SPQ score: M = 20.2, SD = 11.6 vs. M = 11.6, SD = 9.4)
A significant main effect of migration status was found for the SPQ2 (Interpersonal Deficits) factor score (Table 3), reflecting that Moroccan migrants, averaged across both FH groups, showed a higher SPQ2 factor score than did the Dutch nonmigrants (M = 8.4, SD = 5.6 vs. M = 5.5, SD = 5.2) (Table 2)
Summary
Raised incidence rates of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders have been observed in several migrant and ethnic minority groups. Several possible explanations have been suggested for the elevated rates of psychotic disorder observed in migrant and ethnic minority populations (Morgan, Charalambides, Hutchinson, & Murray, 2010; Ødegaard, 1932; Selten & Cantor-Graae, 2005; Sharpley, Hutchinson, Murray, & McKenzie, 2001) These explanations include elevated rates of psychotic disorders in the birth country, selective migration of pre-psychotic individuals, disproportionate referral to services, cultural-diagnostic bias or misdiagnosis, and increased frequencies of putative risk factors, such as pregnancy or birth complications, urban living, or substance use. None of these explanations, alone or in combination, can fully account for the findings (Morgan et al, 2010; Selten & Cantor-Graae, 2005; Sharpley et al, 2001)
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