Taalachterstand en psychose onder mensen met een migratieachtergrond

Translated title of the contribution: Linguistic distance and psychosis in ethnic minorities

H. E. Jongsma, E. M. A. van der Ven, E. Velthorst, L. de Haan, B. P. F. Rutten, J. van Os

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleProfessional

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ethnic minorities in the Netherlands face an excess psychosis risk, and understanding of causality remains limited. Linguistic disadvantage and other indicators of societal exclusion might play a role, and offer potential targets for public health interventions. AIM: To establish the contribution of linguistic disadvantage, indicators of social distance and perceived discrimination to the increased risk of psychoses in migrants and ethnic minorities. METHODS: We used the Dutch data from an international case-control study into psychotic disorders (the EU-GEI study). A first episode of psychosis was our outcome variable, and we used well-defined data on established confounders (e.g. age and sex) and indicators of ethnicity, social distance, linguistic disadvantage and perceived discrimination as our predictor variables. RESULTS: Ethnic minorities face an increased psychosis risk. This appears to be the case for both first- and second- generation migrants and so-called ‘Western’ and non-Western migrants. Though confounders and social distance appear to contribute, linguistic disadvantage appears to play a role in the excess psychosis risk in first-generation migrants. CONCLUSION: Reducing the social consequences of linguistic disadvantage or social distance might be a starting point for concrete public health interventions aimed at preventing the increased psychosis risk faced by first-generation migrants.
Translated title of the contributionLinguistic distance and psychosis in ethnic minorities
Original languageDutch
Pages (from-to)175-180
Number of pages6
JournalTijdschrift voor Psychiatrie
Volume65
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2023

Cite this