1. Long-term employment among people at ultra-high risk for psychosis.
- Author
-
Cotter, Jack, Lin, Ashleigh, Drake, Richard J., Thompson, Andrew, Nelson, Barnaby, McGorry, Patrick, Wood, Stephen J., and Yung, Alison R.
- Subjects
- *
DEPRESSED persons , *PSYCHIATRIC treatment , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *PSYCHOSES , *EMPLOYMENT , *PATIENTS , *EDUCATION , *LONGITUDINAL method , *TIME , *SEVERITY of illness index - Abstract
Background: Psychotic disorders are associated with high rates of sustained unemployment, however, little is known about the long-term employment outcome of people at ultra-high risk (UHR) of developing psychosis. We sought to investigate the long-term unemployment rate and baseline predictors of employment status at follow-up in a large UHR cohort.Method: 268 UHR patients recruited from the Personal Assessment and Crisis Evaluation clinic in Melbourne, Australia were followed-up over 2-14years after initial presentation to the service. Individuals in no form of employment or education were classed as unemployed. Logistic regression analyses were used to examine predictors of employment outcome.Results: A high rate of unemployment was present at follow-up in this UHR sample (23%). At baseline, those who were unemployed at follow-up had a longer duration of untreated illness, more severe negative symptoms, lower IQ, poorer social and occupational functioning and reported more childhood trauma than the employed group. At follow-up, unemployed individuals exhibited significantly more severe symptoms on all measures and were more likely to have been diagnosed with a mood, anxiety, psychotic or substance use disorder. Childhood trauma and the duration of untreated illness at baseline were significant independent predictors of employment status at follow-up in the multivariate analyses.Conclusions: Nearly a quarter of this UHR sample was unemployed at long-term follow-up. The duration of untreated illness and the effects of childhood trauma are potentially modifiable risk factors for long-term employment outcome in this group. Vocational support may be beneficial for many UHR patients presenting to services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF