“We found that many mental health
diagnoses are associated with a drop in life expectancy as great as
that associated with smoking 20 or more cigarettes a day,” said Seena
Fazel from Oxford University.
The researchers looked for the best systematic reviews of clinical
studies which reported mortality risk for a whole range of diagnoses –
mental health problems, substance and alcohol abuse, dementia, autistic spectrum disorders, learning disability and childhood behavioural disorders.
They repeated searches for studies and reviews reporting life
expectancy and risk of dying by suicide, and compared the results to the
best data for heavy smoking.
The average reduction in life expectancy in people with bipolar
disorder was between 9-20 years, it is 10-20 years for schizophrenia,
between 9-24 years for drug and alcohol abuse, and around 7-11 years for
recurrent depression.
The loss of years among heavy smokers was 8-10 years, they found.
“High-risk behaviours are common in psychiatric patients, especially
drug and alcohol abuse, and they are more likely to die by suicide,”
Fazel said.
“The stigma surrounding mental health may mean people aren’t treated as well for physical health problems when they do see a doctor,” he added.
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