Nordic Journal of Psychiatry
Volume 63, Issue 2, 2009, Pages 140-147

Forensic psychiatric patients among immigrants in Denmark - Diagnoses and criminality (Article)

Gabrielsen G.* , Kramp P.
  • a Center for Statistics, Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark
  • b Ministry of Justice, Clinic of Forensic Psychiatry, Copenhagen N, Denmark

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to analyse a sample of immigrant forensic psychiatric patients and to compare them with Danish patients. Of the 326 forensic patients in Copenhagen, 111 were immigrants or descendants of immigrants. The sample was broken down according to area of origin, age, gender and ethnic status. The data have been analysed by Poisson regression with the background population as an offset variable. Of the patients of non-Danish ethnicity, a significantly higher ratio was diagnosed with schizophrenia and a lower ratio was diagnosed with personality disorders compared with Danes. Iranians accounted for a higher ratio than did other minority groups, whereas patients from Western Europe/USA were not different from Danes. The higher ratio of forensic schizophrenic patients of non-Danish ethnicity cannot be explained by social factors or substance abuse. Migration increases the age-adjusted risk (ARR) of becoming schizophrenic (ARR=2.7). We found the ARR of becoming a male forensic schizophrenic patient among immigrants/descendants to be 2.8, i.e. the same as that caused by migration as such. Violence and schizophrenia are associated, and this explains the fact that the ratio of immigrants/descendants having committed violence exceeds that of Danes. Non-violent crimes are more equally distributed among ethnic groups and seem to be associated with common criminogenic factors. Arson is mainly committed by older schizophrenic patients of Danish ethnicity. The risk of an individual immigrant and Danish schizophrenic patient exhibiting criminal behaviour is the same. Schizophrenia is a crimonogenic factor in violence, but not in non-violent crimes. The differences between the various ethnic groups could be related to selection caused by both immigration and emigration.

Author Keywords

schizophrenia Ethnicity Criminality Forensic patients

Index Keywords

personality disorder immigrant schizophrenia psychological aspect methodology Europe risk minority group sex ratio human sex difference comorbidity middle aged statistics Schizophrenic Psychology Denmark violence Ethnic Groups social aspect ethnic group Substance-Related Disorders controlled study substance abuse Iran Cross-Sectional Studies United States Young Adult cross-sectional study Humans mental patient psychology Adolescent male Emigrants and Immigrants female Personality Disorders Article major clinical study adult migration Sex Distribution age distribution addiction criminal behavior crime forensic psychiatry

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-66149158217&doi=10.1080%2f08039480802423014&partnerID=40&md5=fde7009768f9b4f023d72c78c039012b

DOI: 10.1080/08039480802423014
ISSN: 08039488
Cited by: 9
Original Language: English