Background: African-Caribbean men are over-represented in psychiatric and forensic services and in the prison population. A failure of community services to engage mentally ill African-Caribbean men and their presentation through the criminal justice system culminates in a repeated pattern of forensic service and criminal justice system contact.
Method: We carried out a cross-sectional survey during a one-year period of a sample of potentially mentally ill men remanded to HMP Brixton in south London. Men were interviewed to establish their place of birth, first language, socio-demographic profile, ethnicity, psychiatric diagnosis, levels of alcohol and substance misuse, criminality, violence involved in their index offence, past psychiatric and forensic contacts and outcome of court appearance.
Results: Two hundred and seventy-seven men were interviewed. In comparison with White men, African-Caribbean men were more often diagnosed as having schizophrenia and were more often sent to hospital under a mental health act order. African-Caribbean men were remanded in custody despite more stable housing conditions and more favourable indices of lifetime criminality, substance misuse and violence.
Conclusions: Community services, including diversion schemes, should be especially sensitive to African-Caribbean men with schizophrenia who 'fall out of care', who are not diverted back into care and are therefore unnecessarily remanded.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.172.4.337 | DOI Listing |
PLoS One
December 2024
School of Health & Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Background: Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in the UK and Black African-Caribbean men are twice as likely to develop prostate cancer as white men. These cancer inequalities need urgent tackling. Barriers to early diagnosis are complex and require complex solutions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetabolomics
December 2024
Centre for Metabolomics Research (CMR), Department of Biochemistry, Cell, and Systems Biology, Institute of Systems Molecular and Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Introduction: Outside of case-control settings, ethnicity specific changes in the human metabolome are understudied especially in community dwelling, ageing men. Characterising serum for age and ethnicity specific features can enable tailored therapeutics research and improve our understanding of the interplay between age, ethnicity, and metabolism in global populations.
Objective: A metabolomics approach was adopted to profile serum metabolomes in middle-aged and elderly men of different ethnicities from the Northwest of England, UK.
Can Commun Dis Rep
December 2024
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON.
Background: In Canada, HIV transmission continues to disproportionately affect the same communities of gay men, bisexual men and men who have sex with men (gbMSM); members of African, Caribbean or Black communities (ACB); people who use injection drugs; Indigenous people; and women who belong to the aforementioned groups. While primary care is an ideal location for HIV testing for members of these groups, many people do not have access to such healthcare services. In response, we launched GetaKit to distribute HIV self-tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan Commun Dis Rep
December 2024
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON.
Background: In Canada, HIV transmission continues to disproportionately affect the same communities of gay men, bisexual men and men who have sex with men (gbMSM); members of African, Caribbean or Black communities (ACB); people who use injection drugs; Indigenous people; and women who belong to the aforementioned groups. While primary care is an ideal location for HIV testing for members of these groups, many people do not have access to such healthcare services. In response, we launched GetaKit to distribute HIV self-tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet Reg Health Eur
January 2025
Nuffield Department of Primary Health Care Sciences, University of Oxford, UK.
Background: Lung cancer is a leading cause of mortality, yet disparities in lung cancer across different sociodemographic groups in the UK remain unclear. This study investigates ethnicity and sociodemographic disparities and differences in lung cancer in a nationally representative English cohort, aiming to highlight inequalities and promote equitable access to diagnostic advancements.
Methods: We conducted a population-based cohort study using health care records from QResearch, a large primary care database in England.
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