Author:
Brown Steve,Kim Miranda,Mitchell Clemence,Inskip Hazel
Abstract
BackgroundPeople with schizophrenia have significantly raised mortality but we do
not know how these mortality patterns in the UK have changed since the
1990s.AimsTo measure the 25-year mortality of people with schizophrenia with
particular focus on changes over time.MethodProspective record linkage study of the mortality of a community cohort
of 370 people with schizophrenia.ResultsThe cohort had an all-cause standardised mortality ratio of 289 (95% CI
247–337). Most deaths were from the common causes seen in the general
population. Unnatural deaths were concentrated in the first 5 years of
follow-up. There was an indication that cardiovascular mortality may have
increased relative to the general population (P = 0.053)
over the course of the study.ConclusionsPeople with schizophrenia have a mortality risk that is two to three
times that of the general population. Most of the extra deaths are from
natural causes. The apparent increase in cardiovascular mortality
relative to the general population should be of concern to anyone with an
interest in mental health.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
503 articles.
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