Pathways to care and ethnicity. 1: Sample characteristics and compulsory admission. Report from the AESOP study.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Morgan, C
Mallett, R
Hutchinson, G
Bagalkote, H
Morgan, K
Fearon, P
Dazzan, P
Boydell, J
McKenzie, K
Harrison, G

Issue Date

2005-Apr

Type

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

Language

en

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Many studies have found high levels of compulsory admission to psychiatric hospital in the UK among African-Caribbean and Black African patients with a psychotic illness.
To establish whether African-Caribbean and Black African ethnicity is associated with compulsory admission in an epidemiological sample of patients with a first episode of psychosis drawn from two UK centres.
All patients with a first episode of psychosis who made contact with psychiatric services over a 2-year period and were living in defined areas were included in the (AESOP) study. For this analysis we included all White British, other White, African-Caribbean and Black African patients from the AESOP sampling frame. Clinical, socio-demographic and pathways to care data were collected from patients, relatives and case notes.
African-Caribbean patients were significantly more likely to be compulsorily admitted than White British patients, as were Black African patients. African-Caribbean men were the most likely to be compulsorily admitted.
These findings suggest that factors are operating at or prior to first presentation to increase the risk of compulsory admission among African-Caribbean and Black African patients.

Description

Citation

Morgan, C., Mallett, R., Hutchinson, G., Bagalkote, H., Morgan, K., Fearon, P., Dazzan, P., Boydell, J., McKenzie, K., Harrison, G., Murray, R., Jones, P., Craig, T., Leff, J., & AESOP Study Group (2005). Pathways to care and ethnicity. 1: Sample characteristics and compulsory admission. Report from the AESOP study. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science, 186, 281–289. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.186.4.281

Publisher

License

Journal

The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science

Volume

186

Issue

PubMed ID

ISSN

0007-1250

EISSN

Collections