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Title: Ødegaard's selection hypothesis revisited: schizophrenia in Surinamese immigrants to The Netherlands. Author: Selten JP, Cantor-Graae E, Slaets J, Kahn RS. Journal: Am J Psychiatry; 2002 Apr; 159(4):669-71. PubMed ID: 11925311. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The incidence of schizophrenia among Surinamese immigrants to the Netherlands is high. The authors tested Ødegaard's hypothesis that this phenomenon is explained by selective migration. METHOD: The authors imagined that migration from Surinam to the Netherlands subsumed the entire population of Surinam and not solely individuals at risk for schizophrenia. They compared the risk of a first admission to a Dutch mental hospital for schizophrenia from 1983 to 1992 for Surinamese-born immigrants to the risk for Dutch-born individuals, using the Surinamese-born population in the Netherlands and the population of Surinam combined as the denominator for the immigrants. RESULTS: The age- and sex-adjusted relative risk of schizophrenia for the Surinamese-born immigrants was 1.46. CONCLUSIONS: Selective migration cannot solely explain the higher incidence of schizophrenia in Surinamese immigrants to the Netherlands.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]