Unemployment, social isolation, achievement-expectation mismatch and psychosis: findings from the AESOP Study.

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Authors

Reininghaus, Ulrich A
Morgan, Craig
Simpson, Jayne
Dazzan, Paola
Morgan, Kevin
Doody, Gillian A
Bhugra, Dinesh
Leff, Julian
Jones, Peter
Murray, Robin

Issue Date

2008-05-16

Type

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

en

Keywords

Research Projects

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Abstract

In this study, we aimed to establish: (1) whether social isolation modifies the effect of unemployment on first episode psychosis and duration of untreated psychosis (DUP); and (2) whether the gap between high employment expectations and perceived poor employment achievement is associated with first-episode psychosis; and (3) whether the relationship of this achievement-expectation gap and first-episode psychosis is strongest in the African-Caribbean population.
All patients with a first episode of psychosis presenting to specialist mental health services within tightly defined catchment areas in south-east London and Nottingham over a 2-year period were included in the study. A random sample of healthy participants living within the same catchment areas was also recruited. Data were collected on socio-demographic and clinical characteristics, DUP, social contacts, and perceived levels of employment achievement and expectation. Analysis was conducted on data of 546 participants (224 cases, 322 controls) from the AESOP study.
The relationship between unemployment and risk of non-affective psychosis was moderated by social contacts (unemployed/low social contacts, OR 7.52, 95% CI 2.97-19.08; unemployed/medium social contacts, OR 3.27, 95% CI 1.66-6.47; unemployed/high social contacts, OR 1.36, 95% CI 0.47-3.93). Unemployed patients experienced a longer DUP when having reported lower levels of social contacts. Participants whose employment achievement was lower than their expectations were more likely to be cases than those in whom achievement matched or exceeded expectations (adjusted OR 1.84, 95% CI 1.13-3.02). This applied equally to both African-Caribbean and White British participants (the Mantel-Haenszel test for homogeneity of odds ratios, chi (2 )= 0.96, P = 0.33).
This study suggests that unemployment, social isolation, employment achievement and expectations are important environmental factors associated with risk of psychosis. More attention needs to be focused on interactions between environmental factors as well as subjective experience of those factors in future research on the aetiology of psychosis.

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Citation

Reininghaus, U. A., Morgan, C., Simpson, J., Dazzan, P., Morgan, K., Doody, G. A., Bhugra, D., Leff, J., Jones, P., Murray, R., Fearon, P., & Craig, T. K. (2008). Unemployment, social isolation, achievement-expectation mismatch and psychosis: findings from the AESOP Study. Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology, 43(9), 743–751. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00127-008-0359-4

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Journal

Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology

Volume

43

Issue

9

PubMed ID

ISSN

0933-7954

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