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Causes of the excess mortality of schizophrenia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Steve Brown*
Affiliation:
Mental Health Group, University of Southampton
Hazel Inskip
Affiliation:
Medical Research Council Environmental Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton
Brian Barraclough
Affiliation:
Mental Health Group, University of Southampton
*
Dr Steve Brown, Mental Health Group, University of Southampton, Royal South Hants Hospital, Brinton's Terrace, Southampton SO14 0YG, UK. Fax: 023 80234243; e-mail: sb15@soton.ac.uk
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Abstract

Background

The excess mortality of schizophrenia is well recognised, but its precise causes are not well understood.

Aims

To measure the standardised mortality ratio (SMR) and examine the reasons for any excess mortality in a community cohort with schizophrenia.

Method

We carried out a 13-year follow-up of 370 patients with schizophrenia, identifying those who died and their circumstances.

Results

Ninety-six per cent of the cohort was traced. There were 79 deaths. The SMRs for all causes (298), for natural (232) and for unnatural causes (1273), were significantly higher than those to be expected in the general population, as were the SMRs for disease of the circulatory, digestive, endocrine, nervous and respiratory systems, suicide and undetermined death. Smoking-related fatal disease was more prominent than in the general population.

Conclusions

Some of the excess mortality of schizophrenia could be lessened by reducing patients' smoking and exposure to other environmental risk factors and by improving the management of medical disease, mood disturbance and psychosis.

Information

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 
Figure 0

Table 1 Demographic characteristics at cohort inception of 370 subjects with schizophrenia, compared to the general population of England and Wales

Figure 1

Table 2 Cause of death (ICD-9)1 of 79 subjects with schizophrenia with observed deaths, SMRs and 95% CIs, by gender

Figure 2

Table 3 Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) for selected dichotomous risk characteristics associated with altered mortality in the general population. (Subjects with incomplete data were omitted from the pertinent part of these analyses.)

Figure 3

Table 4 Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) for causes of death with two or more deaths

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