Abstract

PurposeA considerable excess of psychosis in black ethnic minorities is apparent from clinical studies, in Britain, as in other developed economies with white majority populations. This excess is not so marked in population surveys. Equitable health service provision should be informed by the best estimates of the excess. We used national survey data to establish the difference in the prevalence of psychosis between black ethnic groups and the white majority in the British general population.MethodsAnalysis of the combined datasets (N = 26,091) from the British national mental health surveys of 1993, 2000 and 2007. Cases of psychosis were determined either by the use of the Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry (SCAN), or from a combination of screening items. We controlled for sex, age, social class, unemployment, design features and other putative confounders, using a Disease Risk Score.ResultsPeople from black ethnic minorities had an excess prevalence rate of psychosis compared with the white majority population. The OR, weighted for study design and response rate, was 2.72 (95 % CI 1.3–5.6, p = 0.002). This was marginally increased after controlling for potential confounders (OR = 2.90, 95 % CI 1.4–6.2, p = 0.006).ConclusionsThe excess of psychosis in black ethnic minority groups was similar to that in two previous British community surveys, and less than that based on clinical studies. Even so it confirms a considerable need for increased mental health service resources in areas with high proportions of black ethnic minority inhabitants.

Highlights

  • It is 100 years since Green [1] reported an increased rate of psychosis in black people in the USA

  • People from black ethnic minorities had an excess prevalence rate of psychosis compared with the white majority population

  • The excess of psychosis in black ethnic minority groups was similar to that in two previous British community surveys, and less than that based on clinical studies

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Summary

Introduction

It is 100 years since Green [1] reported an increased rate of psychosis in black people in the USA. In a large English clinical study (AESOP), very high Incident Risk Ratios were found for schizophrenia in both African-Caribbeans (9.1) and Black Africans (5.8) [2]. In a meta-analysis of the incidence of psychosis in England, Kirkbride et al [3] reported pooled risk ratios, compared with the white (British) population, of 5.6 (95 % CI 3.4–9.2) in the African-Caribbean population, and 4.7 (95 % CI 3.3–6.8) in the black African population. South Asian groups had an RR of 2.4 These results have considerable public health implications, but the locations of the clinical studies have tended to be circumscribed. They would be amplified by epidemiological surveys of whole populations. Sample size is challenging in the case of less common disorders like psychosis

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