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The British Journal of Psychiatry (2007) 191: 279-a13-279. doi: 10.1192/bjp.191.4.A13
© 2007 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
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Highlights of this issue

KIMBERLIE DEAN

CLINICAL PRACTICE AND CLINICAL SERVICES IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Kingdon & Young (pp. 285–290) debate the impact of biological research on clinical psychiatry in the Journal this month. This is followed by a number of review and original research articles which have focused on clinical practice and mental health services. With a particular emphasis on ethnic variation, Raleigh et al (pp. 304–312) examined data from two national surveys of service users’ access to and experience of community mental health services. In addition to finding that ethnicity is poorly recorded by services, the authors found that a number of sociodemographic and clinical factors had a stronger independent impact on patient experience than did ethnicity. Compared with the White British group, the Asian but not the Black patient group responded negatively when asked about their experience of services.

Okai et al (pp. 291–297) conducted a systematic review of research related to mental capacity to consent to treatment among psychiatric patients. Despite the heterogeneity of studies included, the authors found consistent evidence that capacity can be reliably assessed, that mental incapacity is common, and that clinical rather than socio-demographic factors have the greatest impact on likelihood of incapacity. In another review, Gaskin et al (pp. 298–303) found evidence to support interventions intended to reduce use of seclusion facilities in psychiatric units. The authors warn against ignoring the findings of pragmatic studies and argue that more reports of failed attempts to reduce seclusion are needed.

In an inner-city in-patient sample of individuals with severe mental illness, Hodgins et al (pp. 343–350) found high rates of aggressive behaviour, violent victimisation and criminality. They argue that service providers need to recognise that general adult wards are now treating a subgroup of patients presenting with complex difficulties and that this necessitates consideration of specific treatment packages designed to improve outcomes for such groups.

ADOLESCENTS, YOUNG ADULTS AND THOSE WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY

On the basis of data from a birth cohort based in Christchurch, New Zealand, Fergusson et al (pp. 335–342) found that over one third of the sample met criteria for major depression on at least one occasion between ages 16 and 21 years, with 22.7% reporting two or more episodes. They also found that frequency of depression in adolescence and early adulthood predicted poorer psychiatric and life-course outcomes. In a prospective study of a sample with mild-to-profound intellectual disability, Smiley et al (pp. 313–319) found a 2-year incidence of 16.3% for mental ill health. The authors identified a number of risk factors for future ill health, some of which appeared to differ from those found in the general population (e.g. type of accommodation and support, urinary incontinence, severity of intellectual disability and not having impaired mobility).

SOCIAL AND BIOLOGICAL STUDIES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA

The mechanisms underlying the well-established association between urbanicity and increased risk of schizophrenia are not well understood. Weiser et al (pp. 320–324) found evidence for an interaction between population density and poor premorbid social and cognitive functioning, in relation to later risk of schizophrenia. Théberge et al (pp. 325–334) examined glutamatergic changes in a sample of individuals with schizophrenia during their first episode of illness in relation to grey matter volumetric reductions. Thalamic and anterior cingulate glutamine levels were noted to be higher than normal. The authors also noted a correlation between parietal and temporal grey matter loss and thalamic glutamine loss.


Related articles in BJP:

Research into putative biological mechanisms of mental disorders has been of no value to clinical psychiatry
DAVID KINGDON and ALLAN H. YOUNG
BJP 2007 191: 285-290. [Full Text]  

Mental capacity in psychiatric patients: Systematic review
DAVID OKAI, GARETH OWEN, HUGH McGUIRE, SWARAN SINGH, RACHEL CHURCHILL, and MATTHEW HOTOPF
BJP 2007 191: 291-297. [Abstract] [Full Text]  

Interventions for reducing the use of seclusion in psychiatric facilities: Review of the literature
CADEYRN J. GASKIN, STEPHEN J. ELSOM, and BRENDA HAPPELL
BJP 2007 191: 298-303. [Abstract] [Full Text]  

Ethnic variations in the experiences of mental health service users in England: Results of a national patient survey programme
VEENA S. RALEIGH, ROBERT IRONS, EMMA HAWE, SARAH SCOBIE, ADRIAN COOK, RACHEL REEVES, ANN PETRUCKEVITCH, and JULIETTE HARRISON
BJP 2007 191: 304-312. [Abstract] [Full Text]  

Incidence and predictors of mental ill-health in adults with intellectual disabilities: Prospective study
ELITA SMILEY, SALLY-ANN COOPER, JANET FINLAYSON, ALISON JACKSON, LINDA ALLAN, DIPALI MANTRY, CATHERINE McGROTHER, ALEX McCONNACHIE, and JILLIAN MORRISON
BJP 2007 191: 313-319. [Abstract] [Full Text]  

Social and cognitive functioning, urbanicity and risk for schizophrenia
MARK WEISER, JIM VAN OS, ABRAHAM REICHENBERG, JONATHAN RABINOWITZ, DANIELLA NAHON, EFRAT KRAVITZ, GAD LUBIN, MOTI SHMUSHKEVITZ, HAIM Y. KNOBLER, SHLOMO NOY, and MICHAEL DAVIDSON
BJP 2007 191: 320-324. [Abstract] [Full Text]  

Longitudinal grey-matter and glutamatergic losses in first-episode schizophrenia
JEAN THÉBERGE, KATE E. WILLIAMSON, NAOKO AOYAMA, DICK J. DROST, RAHUL MANCHANDA, ASHOK K. MALLA, SANDRA NORTHCOTT, RAVI S. MENON, RICHARD W. J. NEUFELD, NAGALINGAM RAJAKUMAR, WILLIAM PAVLOSKY, MARIA DENSMORE, BETSY SCHAEFER, and PETER C. WILLIAMSON
BJP 2007 191: 325-334. [Abstract] [Full Text]  

Recurrence of major depression in adolescence and early adulthood, and later mental health, educational and economic outcomes
DAVID M. FERGUSSON, JOSEPH M. BODEN, and L. JOHN HORWOOD
BJP 2007 191: 335-342. [Abstract] [Full Text]  

Aggressive behaviour, victimisation and crime among severely mentally ill patients requiring hospitalisation
SHEILAGH HODGINS, JANE ALDERTON, ADRIAN CREE, ANDREW ABOUD, and TIMOTHY MAK
BJP 2007 191: 343-350. [Abstract] [Full Text]  




This Article
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