High psychosis risk among refugees

  • 16/03/2016
Refugees cross a river holding onto a rope on a route to pass the border between Greece and Macedonia (AAP)
Refugees cross a river holding onto a rope on a route to pass the border between Greece and Macedonia (AAP)

Refugees fleeing war, violence and persecution have a much higher risk of developing psychotic illnesses like schizophrenia than people who migrate for economic or social reasons, according to research.

Researchers writing in the BMJ British medical journal on Tuesday (local time) said their findings suggest government healthcare officials in countries taking in refugees should plan to be able to help higher numbers of mental health patients.

Humanitarian crises in Europe, the Middle East, north Africa, and central Asia mean there are currently more displaced people, asylum seekers and refugees worldwide than at any time since World War II.

Refugees have a raised risk of mental conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder -- which brings flashbacks and panic attacks and can render patients emotionally volatile -- but until now little has been known about the risk of psychosis.

So a team from Sweden's Karolinska Institute and Britain's University College London used national register data to look at more than 1.3 million people in Sweden, and tracked diagnoses of non-affective psychotic disorders among the population.

On a per capita basis, Sweden has granted more refugee applications than any other high-income country, the researchers said, and in 2011 refugees constituted 12 percent of the immigrant population.

Those studied included people born to two Swedish-born parents, refugees, and non-refugee migrants from the four major refugee-generating regions: the Middle East and north Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe and Russia.

Their results showed a total of 3704 cases of psychotic disorders, with refugees given asylum some 66 percent more likely to develop schizophrenia or another psychotic disorder than non-refugee migrants.

Refugees were also up to 3.6 times more likely suffer psychosis than the Swedish-born population.

The researchers said health officials in receiving countries should recognise the "need to take the early signs and symptoms of psychosis into account in refugee populations as part of any clinical mental health service response to current global humanitarian crises."

In a commentary about the study, also published in the BMJ, Cornelius Katona, medical director at the Helen Bamber Foundation human rights charity, said Europe needed "a robust mental health response to the refugee crisis" and should try its best to reduce extra stresses imposed when migrants arrive.

Reuters