Abstract

BackgroundSevere mental illnesses are leading causes of disability worldwide. Their prevalence declines with age, possibly due to premature death. It is unclear, however, if people with severe mental disorders who reach older age still have lower life expectancy compared with their peers and if their causes of death differ.Methods and FindingsCohort study of a community-representative sample of 37892 Australian men aged 65–85 years in 1996–1998. Follow up was censored on the 31st December 2010. Lifetime prevalence of schizophrenia spectrum, bipolar, depressive and alcohol-induced disorder was established through record linkage. A subsample of 12136 consented to a face-to-face assessment of sociodemographic, lifestyle and clinical variables. Information about causes of death was retrieved from the Australian Death Registry. The prevalence of schizophrenia spectrum, bipolar, depressive and alcohol-induced disorders was 1.2%, 0.3%, 2.5% and 1.8%. The mortality hazard for men with a severe mental disorder was 2.3 and their life expectancy was reduced by 3 years. Mortality rates increased with age, but the gap between men with and without severe mental disorders was not attenuated by age. Cardiovascular diseases and cancer were the most frequent causes of death. The excess mortality associated with severe mental disorders could not be explained by measured sociodemographic, lifestyle or clinical variables.ConclusionsThe excess mortality associated with severe mental disorders persists in later life, and the causes of death of younger and older people with severe mental disorders are similar. Hazardous lifestyle choices, suboptimal access to health care, poor compliance with treatments, and greater severity of medical comorbidities may all contribute to this increased mortality. Unlike young adults, most older people will visit their primary care physician at least once a year, offering health professionals an opportunity to intervene in order to minimise the harms associated with severe mental disorders.

Highlights

  • Mental and substance use disorders are leading causes of years lived with disability worldwide [1]

  • Oneway analysis of variance showed that men with a past diagnosis of alcohol-induced disorder were 0.5, 1.2 and 1.8 years younger than men without a severe mental disorder, schizophrenia spectrum and depression respectively (p,0.05 after Scheffe correction for multiple comparisons)

  • We completed a sensitivity analysis by excluding from the sample men who died within the first two years of follow up: the mortality hazard associated with any severe mental disorder remained largely unchanged (HR = 2.1, 95% confidence interval (95%CI) = 2.0, 2.2 after the sensitivity analysis)

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Summary

Introduction

Mental and substance use disorders are leading causes of years lived with disability worldwide [1]. There is evidence that the life expectancy of people with severe mental illnesses is ten to fifteen years lower than that of the general population [2], mainly because of a high number of deaths due to cardiovascular events (myocardial infarctions and strokes), respiratory diseases and suicide [3,4,5,6]. Severe mental illnesses are leading causes of disability worldwide Their prevalence declines with age, possibly due to premature death. It is unclear, if people with severe mental disorders who reach older age still have lower life expectancy compared with their peers and if their causes of death differ

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