Scientific article 18. FEB 2016
Social, Familial and Psychological Risk Factors for Psychosis
Authors:
- Philip Hyland
- Mark Shevlin
- Ask Elklit
- Mogens Christoffersen
- Jamie Murphy
The Social Sector
Children, Adolescents and Families
The Social Sector, Children, Adolescents and Families
A broad range of biological, genetic, environmental, and psychological riskfactors for psychosis have been reported. However most research studies have tended to focus on one explanatory factor. The aim of this study wasto use data from a large Danish birth cohort to examine the associationsbetween psychosis and a broad range of familial (advanced paternal age, family dissolution, parental psychosis), environmental (urbanicity,deprivation) and psychological factors (childhood adversity). Findings indicated that all types of risk factors were significantly associated with psychosis. In conclusion, large scale cohort studies using the Danish registry system is a powerful way of assessing the relative impact ofdifferent risk factors for psychosis.
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Psychosis