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Social and economic disparities are linked to an increased risk for psychosis in Black and Latino communities, new research shows.

Dr. Deidre M. Anglin

Results of a literature review of social and economic disparities in mental illness suggest that “structural racism” contributes to social and environmental conditions that affect psychosis risk.

“Black and Latino people suffer disproportionately from psychosis risk factors, at the neighborhood level and at the individual level, in large part as a result of structural racism,” study investigator Deidre M. Anglin, PhD, associate professor, department of psychology, City College of New York (N.Y.), told reporters attending a press briefing.

The social environment, which, for minorities, involves disadvantage and discrimination, may account for this increased psychosis risk, perhaps even more so than genetics, she said. Structural racism “is a critical public health threat,” Dr. Anglin added.

The findings were presented at the virtual American Psychiatric Association annual meeting and were simultaneously published online May 3 in The American Journal of Psychiatry.
 

Perpetual disadvantage

Dr. Anglin and colleagues examined U.S.-based evidence connecting characteristics of social environments with outcomes across the psychosis continuum – from psychotic experiences to schizophrenia.

Citing numerous studies, the researchers highlighted three key areas that reflect social and environmental conditions that may affect psychosis risk, and that disproportionately affect minorities. These were neighborhood factors, trauma in a U.S. context, and racial disparities during the prenatal and perinatal periods.

The data that were related to neighborhoods revealed “just how much racism has historically structured U.S. neighborhoods in ways that generationally perpetuate disadvantage for racially minoritized communities,” said Dr. Anglin.

“This happens through inequitable access to resources, such as health care, clean air, education, [and] employment, but also in terms of disproportionate exposure to environmental toxins and stressors,” she said.

These neighborhood factors are associated with cumulative stress that may be linked to heightened risk for psychosis, the investigators noted.

U.S. studies show that rates of adverse childhood experiences, such as abuse and emotional and physical neglect, are higher among racial and ethnic minorities.

Police victimization and gun violence disproportionately affect racial minorities and create what the investigators call “a unique type of collective trauma” in the United States. They note that Black men have a 1 in 1,000 chance of being victims of lethal force by police over their lifetimes. By comparison, White men have a 39 in 100,000 chance.

One study of a diverse sample from four large U.S. urban centers showed that those who self-reported different types of police victimization were more likely to report psychotic experiences. Another study showed that greater exposure to gun violence fatalities, regardless of police involvement, was positively associated with psychotic experiences.
 

Obstetric complications

A variety of obstetric complications, including infection, maternal inflammation, and stress, have been associated with increased risk for psychotic disorders in U.S. samples.

“What we saw emerge from the literature is that Black women in the U.S. are at substantially increased risk for many of these obstetrical complications compared to White women, and this is not necessarily explained by socioeconomic status,” said Dr. Anglin.

Neighborhood- and individual-level factors appear to affect the disparity in these outcomes. A recent study revealed that exposure to environmental contaminants such as air pollution is associated with higher rates of preterm birth and low birth weight differentially in Black mothers compared with other mothers, “possibly as a result of an interaction between prenatal stress and contaminants,” the investigators noted.

Research also indicates that Black women are more likely to have lower levels of cortisol during the second trimester of pregnancy compared with women of other racial and ethnic groups. Cortisol is essential for fetal growth. Evidence links lower cortisol levels in later stages of pregnancy with decreased fetal growth in individuals who develop schizophrenia.

Black women have higher levels of certain stress biomarkers, including inflammatory C-reactive protein and adrenocorticotropic hormone, in mid- to late pregnancy, compared with White women of the same socioeconomic status.

Such findings “highlight a complex picture” involving maternal cortisol levels and other stress biomarkers, “potentially leading to poor birth outcomes and subsequent risk for psychotic disorders in adulthood,” the investigators noted.

The researchers call for the dismantling of structural racism and the social policies and norms it shapes. They also recommend changes in health care policy and in the approach to early intervention for psychosis among Black and other racially-minoritized groups.

“Altogether, the current evidence suggests the need to identify, address, and tackle the social determinants deeply ingrained in U.S. society, in tandem with empowering the most marginalized communities,” the researchers wrote.

“We recommend that the field of psychiatry devote considerably more effort to addressing structural racism and social determinants of psychosis in funding priorities, training, and intervention development,” they added.

Dr. Anglin suggests that mental health providers use what she called a “cultural formulation interview” that takes a person’s environmental and social context into consideration. Studies show that incorporating this into clinical practice helps reduce misdiagnosis of mental illness in Black populations, she said.
 

 

 

Call to action

Commenting on the findings in an interview, Ned H. Kalin, MD, editor of The American Journal of Psychiatry and professor and chair of the department of psychiatry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, said the study was well done and serves as a “call to action” to address the impact of structural racism on mental health issues and psychiatric diseases.

The article highlights the need for “collecting better data” on structural racism, said Dr. Kalin. “We know it’s a big issue, but we can’t even quantitate it, so we need some fundamental measures to use as a benchmark as we move forward, as we try to make change.”

He noted that racism “is so embedded in one’s experience and in our society that we sort of don’t even think about it as a trauma.”

In psychiatry, for example, trauma is often thought of as a loss or a traumatic event. “We don’t typically think of trauma as an experience that pervades one’s entire life,” but that needs to change, he said. “At the individual level and in the doctor’s office, being sensitive to and aware of these issues is absolutely critical.”

Dr. Anglin and Dr. Kalin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Social and economic disparities are linked to an increased risk for psychosis in Black and Latino communities, new research shows.

Dr. Deidre M. Anglin

Results of a literature review of social and economic disparities in mental illness suggest that “structural racism” contributes to social and environmental conditions that affect psychosis risk.

“Black and Latino people suffer disproportionately from psychosis risk factors, at the neighborhood level and at the individual level, in large part as a result of structural racism,” study investigator Deidre M. Anglin, PhD, associate professor, department of psychology, City College of New York (N.Y.), told reporters attending a press briefing.

The social environment, which, for minorities, involves disadvantage and discrimination, may account for this increased psychosis risk, perhaps even more so than genetics, she said. Structural racism “is a critical public health threat,” Dr. Anglin added.

The findings were presented at the virtual American Psychiatric Association annual meeting and were simultaneously published online May 3 in The American Journal of Psychiatry.
 

Perpetual disadvantage

Dr. Anglin and colleagues examined U.S.-based evidence connecting characteristics of social environments with outcomes across the psychosis continuum – from psychotic experiences to schizophrenia.

Citing numerous studies, the researchers highlighted three key areas that reflect social and environmental conditions that may affect psychosis risk, and that disproportionately affect minorities. These were neighborhood factors, trauma in a U.S. context, and racial disparities during the prenatal and perinatal periods.

The data that were related to neighborhoods revealed “just how much racism has historically structured U.S. neighborhoods in ways that generationally perpetuate disadvantage for racially minoritized communities,” said Dr. Anglin.

“This happens through inequitable access to resources, such as health care, clean air, education, [and] employment, but also in terms of disproportionate exposure to environmental toxins and stressors,” she said.

These neighborhood factors are associated with cumulative stress that may be linked to heightened risk for psychosis, the investigators noted.

U.S. studies show that rates of adverse childhood experiences, such as abuse and emotional and physical neglect, are higher among racial and ethnic minorities.

Police victimization and gun violence disproportionately affect racial minorities and create what the investigators call “a unique type of collective trauma” in the United States. They note that Black men have a 1 in 1,000 chance of being victims of lethal force by police over their lifetimes. By comparison, White men have a 39 in 100,000 chance.

One study of a diverse sample from four large U.S. urban centers showed that those who self-reported different types of police victimization were more likely to report psychotic experiences. Another study showed that greater exposure to gun violence fatalities, regardless of police involvement, was positively associated with psychotic experiences.
 

Obstetric complications

A variety of obstetric complications, including infection, maternal inflammation, and stress, have been associated with increased risk for psychotic disorders in U.S. samples.

“What we saw emerge from the literature is that Black women in the U.S. are at substantially increased risk for many of these obstetrical complications compared to White women, and this is not necessarily explained by socioeconomic status,” said Dr. Anglin.

Neighborhood- and individual-level factors appear to affect the disparity in these outcomes. A recent study revealed that exposure to environmental contaminants such as air pollution is associated with higher rates of preterm birth and low birth weight differentially in Black mothers compared with other mothers, “possibly as a result of an interaction between prenatal stress and contaminants,” the investigators noted.

Research also indicates that Black women are more likely to have lower levels of cortisol during the second trimester of pregnancy compared with women of other racial and ethnic groups. Cortisol is essential for fetal growth. Evidence links lower cortisol levels in later stages of pregnancy with decreased fetal growth in individuals who develop schizophrenia.

Black women have higher levels of certain stress biomarkers, including inflammatory C-reactive protein and adrenocorticotropic hormone, in mid- to late pregnancy, compared with White women of the same socioeconomic status.

Such findings “highlight a complex picture” involving maternal cortisol levels and other stress biomarkers, “potentially leading to poor birth outcomes and subsequent risk for psychotic disorders in adulthood,” the investigators noted.

The researchers call for the dismantling of structural racism and the social policies and norms it shapes. They also recommend changes in health care policy and in the approach to early intervention for psychosis among Black and other racially-minoritized groups.

“Altogether, the current evidence suggests the need to identify, address, and tackle the social determinants deeply ingrained in U.S. society, in tandem with empowering the most marginalized communities,” the researchers wrote.

“We recommend that the field of psychiatry devote considerably more effort to addressing structural racism and social determinants of psychosis in funding priorities, training, and intervention development,” they added.

Dr. Anglin suggests that mental health providers use what she called a “cultural formulation interview” that takes a person’s environmental and social context into consideration. Studies show that incorporating this into clinical practice helps reduce misdiagnosis of mental illness in Black populations, she said.
 

 

 

Call to action

Commenting on the findings in an interview, Ned H. Kalin, MD, editor of The American Journal of Psychiatry and professor and chair of the department of psychiatry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, said the study was well done and serves as a “call to action” to address the impact of structural racism on mental health issues and psychiatric diseases.

The article highlights the need for “collecting better data” on structural racism, said Dr. Kalin. “We know it’s a big issue, but we can’t even quantitate it, so we need some fundamental measures to use as a benchmark as we move forward, as we try to make change.”

He noted that racism “is so embedded in one’s experience and in our society that we sort of don’t even think about it as a trauma.”

In psychiatry, for example, trauma is often thought of as a loss or a traumatic event. “We don’t typically think of trauma as an experience that pervades one’s entire life,” but that needs to change, he said. “At the individual level and in the doctor’s office, being sensitive to and aware of these issues is absolutely critical.”

Dr. Anglin and Dr. Kalin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Social and economic disparities are linked to an increased risk for psychosis in Black and Latino communities, new research shows.

Dr. Deidre M. Anglin

Results of a literature review of social and economic disparities in mental illness suggest that “structural racism” contributes to social and environmental conditions that affect psychosis risk.

“Black and Latino people suffer disproportionately from psychosis risk factors, at the neighborhood level and at the individual level, in large part as a result of structural racism,” study investigator Deidre M. Anglin, PhD, associate professor, department of psychology, City College of New York (N.Y.), told reporters attending a press briefing.

The social environment, which, for minorities, involves disadvantage and discrimination, may account for this increased psychosis risk, perhaps even more so than genetics, she said. Structural racism “is a critical public health threat,” Dr. Anglin added.

The findings were presented at the virtual American Psychiatric Association annual meeting and were simultaneously published online May 3 in The American Journal of Psychiatry.
 

Perpetual disadvantage

Dr. Anglin and colleagues examined U.S.-based evidence connecting characteristics of social environments with outcomes across the psychosis continuum – from psychotic experiences to schizophrenia.

Citing numerous studies, the researchers highlighted three key areas that reflect social and environmental conditions that may affect psychosis risk, and that disproportionately affect minorities. These were neighborhood factors, trauma in a U.S. context, and racial disparities during the prenatal and perinatal periods.

The data that were related to neighborhoods revealed “just how much racism has historically structured U.S. neighborhoods in ways that generationally perpetuate disadvantage for racially minoritized communities,” said Dr. Anglin.

“This happens through inequitable access to resources, such as health care, clean air, education, [and] employment, but also in terms of disproportionate exposure to environmental toxins and stressors,” she said.

These neighborhood factors are associated with cumulative stress that may be linked to heightened risk for psychosis, the investigators noted.

U.S. studies show that rates of adverse childhood experiences, such as abuse and emotional and physical neglect, are higher among racial and ethnic minorities.

Police victimization and gun violence disproportionately affect racial minorities and create what the investigators call “a unique type of collective trauma” in the United States. They note that Black men have a 1 in 1,000 chance of being victims of lethal force by police over their lifetimes. By comparison, White men have a 39 in 100,000 chance.

One study of a diverse sample from four large U.S. urban centers showed that those who self-reported different types of police victimization were more likely to report psychotic experiences. Another study showed that greater exposure to gun violence fatalities, regardless of police involvement, was positively associated with psychotic experiences.
 

Obstetric complications

A variety of obstetric complications, including infection, maternal inflammation, and stress, have been associated with increased risk for psychotic disorders in U.S. samples.

“What we saw emerge from the literature is that Black women in the U.S. are at substantially increased risk for many of these obstetrical complications compared to White women, and this is not necessarily explained by socioeconomic status,” said Dr. Anglin.

Neighborhood- and individual-level factors appear to affect the disparity in these outcomes. A recent study revealed that exposure to environmental contaminants such as air pollution is associated with higher rates of preterm birth and low birth weight differentially in Black mothers compared with other mothers, “possibly as a result of an interaction between prenatal stress and contaminants,” the investigators noted.

Research also indicates that Black women are more likely to have lower levels of cortisol during the second trimester of pregnancy compared with women of other racial and ethnic groups. Cortisol is essential for fetal growth. Evidence links lower cortisol levels in later stages of pregnancy with decreased fetal growth in individuals who develop schizophrenia.

Black women have higher levels of certain stress biomarkers, including inflammatory C-reactive protein and adrenocorticotropic hormone, in mid- to late pregnancy, compared with White women of the same socioeconomic status.

Such findings “highlight a complex picture” involving maternal cortisol levels and other stress biomarkers, “potentially leading to poor birth outcomes and subsequent risk for psychotic disorders in adulthood,” the investigators noted.

The researchers call for the dismantling of structural racism and the social policies and norms it shapes. They also recommend changes in health care policy and in the approach to early intervention for psychosis among Black and other racially-minoritized groups.

“Altogether, the current evidence suggests the need to identify, address, and tackle the social determinants deeply ingrained in U.S. society, in tandem with empowering the most marginalized communities,” the researchers wrote.

“We recommend that the field of psychiatry devote considerably more effort to addressing structural racism and social determinants of psychosis in funding priorities, training, and intervention development,” they added.

Dr. Anglin suggests that mental health providers use what she called a “cultural formulation interview” that takes a person’s environmental and social context into consideration. Studies show that incorporating this into clinical practice helps reduce misdiagnosis of mental illness in Black populations, she said.
 

 

 

Call to action

Commenting on the findings in an interview, Ned H. Kalin, MD, editor of The American Journal of Psychiatry and professor and chair of the department of psychiatry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, said the study was well done and serves as a “call to action” to address the impact of structural racism on mental health issues and psychiatric diseases.

The article highlights the need for “collecting better data” on structural racism, said Dr. Kalin. “We know it’s a big issue, but we can’t even quantitate it, so we need some fundamental measures to use as a benchmark as we move forward, as we try to make change.”

He noted that racism “is so embedded in one’s experience and in our society that we sort of don’t even think about it as a trauma.”

In psychiatry, for example, trauma is often thought of as a loss or a traumatic event. “We don’t typically think of trauma as an experience that pervades one’s entire life,” but that needs to change, he said. “At the individual level and in the doctor’s office, being sensitive to and aware of these issues is absolutely critical.”

Dr. Anglin and Dr. Kalin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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