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Diagnosed Incidence of Non-Affective Psychotic Disorders Amongst Adolescents in British Columbia and Sociodemographic Risk Factors: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Authors:Carly Magee  Martin Guhn  Joseph H. Puyat  Anne Gadermann  Eva Oberle
Affiliation:1.School of Population and Public Health (SPPH), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; 2.Human Early Learning Partnership (HELP), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; 3.Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHEOS), St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract:ObjectivesTo estimate the diagnosed incidence of non-affective psychotic disorder between the ages of 13 and 19 years in South-Western British Columbia (BC) and to examine variation in risk by sex, family and neighbourhood income, family migration background, parent mental health contact and birth year.MethodsLinked individual-level administrative data were used to construct a cohort of individuals born in 1990–1998 and residing in South-Western BC (n = 193,400). Cases were identified by either one hospitalization or two outpatient physician visits within 2 years with a primary diagnosis of a non-affective psychotic disorder (ICD-10: F20–29, ICD-9: 295, 297, 298). We estimated cumulative incidence, annual cumulative incidence and incidence rate between the ages of 13 and 19 years, and conducted Cox proportional hazards regression to estimate associations between sociodemographic factors and risk over the study period.ResultsWe found that 0.64% of females and 0.88% of males were diagnosed with a non-affective psychotic disorder between the ages of 13 and 19 years, with increasing risk observed over the age range, especially amongst males. Incidence rate over the entire study period was 106 per 100,000 person-years for females and 145 per 100,000 person-years for males. Risk of diagnosis was elevated amongst those in low-income families and neighbourhoods, those with a parent who had a health service contact for a mental disorder, and more recent birth cohorts. Risk was reduced amongst children of immigrants compared to children of non-migrants.ConclusionsFindings from this study provide important information for health service planning in South-Western BC. Future work should examine whether variations in diagnosed incidence is driven by differences in health service engagement or reflect genuine differences in risk.
Keywords:adolescence   early-onset schizophrenia   immigrant mental health   psychosis   refugee   schizophrenia   sex   income inequality   health disparities
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