Migration history and risk of psychosis: results from the multinational EU-GEI study
[
.pdf
382Kb
]
Psychosis rates are higher among some migrant groups. Our hypotheses is that psychosis in migrants is associated with cumulative social disadvantage during different phases of migration. To test these hypotheses, we examined whether social disadvantages in the country of origin, adversities during the migration process, social disadvantages in the country of arrival, and the mismatch between pre-migratory expectations (health, work, income, family, friends) and post-migratory achievements differed between first-generation migrant cases and controls. We tested whether these accounted for differences in odds of psychotic disorders after adjusting for ethnicity and known risk factors for psychosis (family history of psychosis, childhood trauma, education, lifetime cannabis use), length of stay following migration and language fluency in first-generation migrants. We used data from the six-country EUropean network of national schizophrenia networks studying Gene-Environment Interactions (EU-GEI; work package 2) case–control study, which included these exposure measures in an ethnically- and culturally-diverse sample.