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   English Wikipedia
 
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 The social causes of psychosis in North American psychiatry: a review of a  disappearing literature Jarvis GECan J Psychiatry  2007[May]; 52 (5): 287-94OBJECTIVE: To review the North American literature with respect to the role of  social factors in the etiology of psychosis, including schizophrenia. METHOD:  Relevant publications were identified through a search of MEDLINE from 1966 to  2006. Identified studies and articles had to originate in Canada or the United  States to be included in the review. Articles written prior to 1966 were  identified by cross-referencing bibliographies and reference lists. Articles were  considered relevant if they discussed ethnoracial or other social factors as  being causal or contributing to the development of psychosis or schizophrenia.  RESULTS: The relation between the etiology of psychosis and such social factors  as poverty, migration, and racial discrimination has been neglected in the North  American psychiatric literature for the last 40 years. In Canada and the United  States, there is a dearth of research on these issues: the study of social causes  of psychosis has been replaced by a focus on the clinical encounter, in which  clinician bias is presumed to be responsible for widespread misdiagnosis of  psychosis in minority (mainly African-American) populations. The reasons for  neglecting social causes of psychosis in the North American psychiatric  literature are obscure but may have to do with the rise of genetic-biological  paradigms in recent decades. CONCLUSIONS: The neglect of social causes of  psychosis in the North American psychiatric literature has been coincident with  an increase in scholarly concern among European clinicians and researchers.  Careful reading of the European literature may reveal helpful avenues for future  investigation in the North American context. In addition, drawing on social  science literature and methods may help to clarify mechanisms underlying poverty,  migration, and racial discrimination that contribute to psychosis in vulnerable  individuals and groups.|*Life Change Events[MESH]|*Social Environment[MESH]|Black People/psychology/statistics & numerical data[MESH]|Black or African American[MESH]|Canada[MESH]|Causality[MESH]|Emigration and Immigration/statistics & numerical data[MESH]|Europe[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Psychotic Disorders/diagnosis/epidemiology/*etiology[MESH]|Research[MESH]|Risk Factors[MESH]|Schizophrenia/diagnosis/epidemiology/etiology[MESH]|United States[MESH]|White People/psychology/statistics & numerical data[MESH]
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