Longevity Gap
Worsens for People with Schizophrenia
(October 04, 2007) -- As medical advances boost lifespans across the world, one group of people
has been left out. According to a new review of existing research, people
with
schizophrenia are falling further behind others when it comes to
longevity.
“Put simply, on average,
patients with schizophrenia are two to three
times more likely to die compared to the general population,” said review
co-author John McGrath, M.D., a professor at the Queensland Centre for
Mental Health Research in Australia.
And, he said, the gap is growing.
An estimated 1 percent of all people are expected to develop
schizophrenia during their lives; perhaps the most famous living person with
the diagnosis is
John Nash, the mathematician and subject of the book and
film “A Beautiful Mind.”
Symptoms typically appear when people are in their 20s, McGrath said, and
are more likely to strike men than women by a ratio of about 3 to 2.
People with schizophrenia suffer from
hallucinations and what’s called
“disorganized” thinking.
Medications can control symptoms fairly quickly,
but they have numerous side effects, said Thomas McGlashan, M.D., a
professor of psychiatry at Yale University.
In the new review, McGrath and colleagues examined 37 studies from 1980
to 2006 that explored death rates among people with schizophrenia. The
studies were from 25 countries, including a number from the United States.
The researchers report their findings in the October 2007 issue of the
Archives of General Psychiatry.
The researchers found that the death rate among people with schizophrenia
was about 2.5 times that of other people. Suicide was the biggest risk:
Schizophrenia patients were almost 13 times more likely to commit suicide
than other people.
That number is a “tragic reflection on how suboptimal our current
treatments are,” McGrath said.
Schizophrenic sufferers were also more likely to die of most other major
causes of death, and the gap between death rates for people with
schizophrenics and those without actually grew over time. McGrath thinks the
divide may become even bigger in the future because newer medications for
schizophrenia causes
unhealthy side effects like weight gain and an
increased risk of type 2 diabetes.
Why aren’t people with schizophrenia doing better in an era of so many
medical advances across the board? Psychiatrists blame medications for not
doing more to help. Many schizophrenic patients take their pills only
sporadically because of their side effects.
“Probably the most pernicious (side effect) is that they take the ‘joie
de vivre’ out of life,” McGlashan said. Patients “just don’t often feel
alive or ‘with it’ or motivated.”
As a result, many stop taking their medications and end up having
symptoms again. “They have to be rehospitalized and put back on medication,”
he said. “It becomes a revolving door.”
Even if people do take their schizophrenia medications, they have
problems taking care of themselves when they become ill, McGlashan said.
“They’re less self aware, less motivated to do the kinds of things that are
required for handling a lot of these disorders. Going to a doctor regularly,
getting blood tests — they don’t do it, even when they’re on medication.”
Other possible factors may be at play, according to the review.
Schizophrenic patients are more likely to engage in high-risk activities,
and it may be possible that their genetic makeup makes them more prone to
some illnesses like diabetes.
Overall, the report said, the findings “suggest that this already
disadvantaged group is not benefiting from the improved health of the
community in an equitable fashion. A systematic approach to monitoring and
treating the physical health needs of people with schizophrenia is clearly
warranted.”
Drug companies are trying to figure out how to stop the
life-deadening effects of medications, McGlashan said. “But they’re not
really sure what causes that kind of reaction to begin with. It has
something to do with the disorder, but it involves something different than
the usual neurochemicals that the drugs target.”
He added that “in the long term, we’re working hard to try to figure out
a cause of this disorder. It’s going to be a while. We don’t know how long.”
By: Randy Dotinga
Source: Health Behavior News Service
Last updated: 10/07
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