17 research outputs found

    Self-harm risk between adolescence and midlife in people who experienced separation from one or both parents during childhood

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    AbstractBackgroundExperience of child-parent separation predicts adverse outcomes in later life. We conducted a detailed epidemiological examination of this complex relationship by modelling an array of separation scenarios and trajectories and subsequent risk of self-harm.MethodsThis cohort study examined persons born in Denmark during 1971–1997. We measured child-parent separations each year from birth to 15th birthday via complete residential address records in the Civil Registration System. Self-harm episodes between 15th birthday and early middle age were ascertained through linkage to psychiatric and general hospital registers. Incidence rate ratios (IRRs) from Poisson regression models were estimated against a reference category of individuals not separated from their parents.ResultsAll exposure models examined indicated an association with raised self-harm risk. For example, large elevations in risk were observed in relation to separation from both parents at 15th birthday (IRR 5.50, 95% CI 5.25–5.77), experiencing five or more changes in child-parent separation status (IRR 5.24, CI 4.88–5.63), and having a shorter duration of familial cohesion during upbringing. There was no significant evidence for varying strength of association according to child's gender.LimitationsMeasuring child-parent separation according to differential residential addresses took no account of the reason for or circumstances of these separations.ConclusionsThese novel findings suggest that self-harm prevention initiatives should be tailored toward exposed persons who remain psychologically distressed into adulthood. These high-risk subgroups include individuals with little experience of familial cohesion during their upbringing, those with the most complicated trajectories who lived through multiple child-parent separation transitions, and those separated from both parents during early adolescence

    Frequent use of opioids in patients with dementia and nursing home residents:A study of the entire elderly population of Denmark

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    AbstractBackgroundPain is believed to be undertreated in patients with dementia; however, no larger studies have been conducted. The aim was to investigate prevalent use of opioids in elderly with and without dementia in the entire elderly population of Denmark.MethodA register-based cross-sectional study in the entire elderly (≥65 years) population in 2010 was conducted. Opioid use among elderly with dementia (N = 35,455) was compared with elderly without (N = 870,645), taking age, sex, comorbidity, and living status into account.ResultsNursing home residents (NHRs) used opioids most frequently (41%), followed by home-living patients with dementia (27.5%) and home-living patients without dementia (16.9%). Buprenorphine and fentanyl (primarily patches) were commonly used among NHRs (18.7%) and home-living patients with dementia (10.7%) but less often by home-living patients without dementia (2.4%).ConclusionsOpioid use in the elderly Danish population was frequent but particularly in patients with dementia and NHR, which may challenge patient safety and needs further investigation

    Parental psychiatric disease and risks of attempted suicide and violent criminal offending in offspring: population-based cohort study

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    IMPORTANCE: Self-directed and interpersonal violence share some common risk factors such as a parental history of mental illness. However, relationships between the full spectrum of parental psychiatric disease and these 2 related outcomes are unclear. OBJECTIVE: To examine associations between the full spectrum of parental psychiatric disease and risks of attempted suicide and violent offending among offspring. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Population-based cohort study of all persons born in Denmark 1967 through 1997, followed up from their 15(th) birthday until occurrence of adverse outcome or December 31, 2012, whichever came first. EXPOSURES: Array of parental psychiatric disorders and parental suicide attempt, delineated from records of secondary care treatments. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Using survival analyses techniques, incidence rate ratios were estimated for offspring suicide attempt and violent offending. RESULTS: We examined 1,743,525 cohort members (48.7 % female, total follow-up, 27.2 million person-years). Risks for offspring suicide attempt and violent offending were elevated across virtually the full spectrum of parental psychiatric disease. Incidence rate ratios were the most elevated for parental diagnoses of antisocial personality disorder (suicide attempt, 3.96; 95% CI, 3.72-4.21; violent offending, 3.62; 95% CI, 3.41-3.84), and cannabis misuse (suicide attempt, 3.57; 95% CI, 3.25-3.92; violent offending, 4.05; 95% CI, 3.72-4.39), and for parental suicide attempt (suicide attempt, 3.42; 95% CI, 3.29-3.55; violent offending, 3.31; 95% CI, 3.19-3.44). Parental mood disorders (and bipolar disorder in particular) conferred more modest risk increases. A history of mental illness or suicide attempt in both parents was associated with double the risks compared with having just 1 affected parent. Associations between parental psychiatric disease and offspring violent offending were stronger for female than for male offspring, whereas little sex difference in risk was found for offspring suicide attempt. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The similarities in risk patterns observed between the 2 outcomes may evidence a shared etiology. Early interventions to tackle parental mental disorders may be beneficial to both parents and children

    Premature Mortality Among Patients Recently Discharged From Their First Inpatient Psychiatric Treatment

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    Importance: Patients recently discharged from psychiatric inpatient services are at elevated risk of dying prematurely. National cohorts provide sufficient statistical power for examining cause-specific mortality in this population.Objective: To comprehensively investigate premature mortality in a national cohort of recently discharged psychiatric patients at 15-44 years of age. Design, setting, and participants: Cohort study of all persons born in Denmark during 1967-1996 (N=1,683,385). Participants were followed up from their 15th birthday until their date of death, emigration or December 31st 2011, whichever came first.Exposures: First discharge from inpatient psychiatric care.Main outcome measures: Incidence rates and incidence rate ratios (IRRs) for all-cause mortality and for an array of unnatural and natural causes among discharged patients versus persons not admitted for psychiatric care. Our primary analysis considered risk within a year of first discharge.Results: Compared to persons not admitted, discharged patients had an elevated risk for all-cause mortality within a year (IRR 16.2, 95% CI 14.5-18.0). Relative risk for unnatural death (IRR 25.0, 95% CI 22.0- 28.4) was much higher than for natural death (IRR 8.6, 95% CI 7.0-10.7). The highest IRR found was for suicide: IRR 66.9, 95% CI 56.4-79.4; the IRR for alcohol-related deaths was the second highest observed: IRR 42.0, 95% CI 26.6-66.1. Among the psychiatric diagnostic categories assessed, psychoactive substance abuse conferred the highest risk for all-cause mortality (IRR 24.8, 95% CI 21.0-29.4). Across the array of cause-specific outcomes examined, risk of premature death during the first year post-discharge was markedly elevated compared to longer term follow up. Conclusions and relevance: Enhanced liaison between primary and secondary health services post-discharge, as well as early intervention programs for drug and alcohol misuse could substantially decrease the greatly elevated mortality risk among recently discharged psychiatric patients.<br/

    Urbanicity and Autism Spectrum Disorders

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    The etiology of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) is for the majority of cases unknown and more studies of risk factors are needed. Geographic variation in ASD occurrence has been observed, and urban residence has been suggested to serve as a proxy for etiologic and identification factors in ASD. We examined the association between urbanicity level and ASD at birth and during childhood. The study used a Danish register-based cohort of more than 800,000 children of which nearly 4,000 children were diagnosed with ASD. We found a dose–response association with greater level of urbanicity and risk of ASD. This association was found for residence at birth as well as residence during childhood. Further, we found an increased risk of ASD in children who moved to a higher level of urbanicity after birth. Also, earlier age of ASD diagnosis in urban areas was observed. While we could not directly examine the specific reasons behind these associations, our results demonstrating particularly strong associations between ASD diagnosis and post-birth migration suggest the influence of identification-related factors such as access to services might have a substantive role on the ASD differentials we observed
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