Emergency Psychiatry, Compulsory Admissions and Clinical Presentations among Immigrants to The Netherlands

Background: Black individuals in the UK have higher rates of contact with psychiatric emergency services than their White counterparts. It is unknown whether this is also the case in other European countries. Aims: To compare the risk of contact with psychiatric emergency services & of compulsor...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of psychiatry 2006-04, Vol.188, p.386-391
Hauptverfasser: Mulder, Cornelis L, Koopmans, Gerrit T, Selten, Jean-Paul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Black individuals in the UK have higher rates of contact with psychiatric emergency services than their White counterparts. It is unknown whether this is also the case in other European countries. Aims: To compare the risk of contact with psychiatric emergency services & of compulsory admission between immigrant groups to The Netherlands & Dutch natives, & to determine the unique contribution of ethnicity to compulsory admission. Method: Study of 720 people referred to emergency psychiatric services in Greater Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Results: The relative risks (RRs) for contacts with psychiatric emergency services, for having a psychotic disorder & for compulsory admission were significantly higher in most immigrant groups. Moroccans, Surinamese & Dutch Antilleans had the highest risks of compulsory admission. After controlling for symptom severity, danger, motivation for treatment & level of social functioning, non-Western origin was no longer associated with compulsory admission. Conclusions: Non-Western immigrant groups were overrepresented in psychiatric emergency care & were admitted compulsorily more frequently, possibly owing to a different clinical presentation. 3 Tables, 10 References. Adapted from the source document.
ISSN:0007-1250