Recently, there has been increasing focus on prevention of mental illness,
early intervention and the promotion of mental health. The social
determinants of health and public health approaches are considered key.
Early intervention has focused on psychotic disorders but prevention has
not. This may in part reflect the fact that public health planners do not
have a clear model for how social determinants influence the risk of
developing a psychotic illness. Drawing on biological, genetic and
epidemiologic evidence regarding the relationship between social risk
factors and psychosis, this paper outlines a conceptual framework for
understanding how individual and ecological factors contribute and interact
to modulate the risk of developing psychotic illness. The framework asserts
that there are four dimensions: individual factors; ecological factors; the
interaction between individual and ecological factors; and time. It may help
those considering interventions to understand the multilevel and
multifactorial effects of social factors on the aetiology of psychotic
illness, to develop targeted strategies for the prevention of psychotic
illness and serve as a template for the assessment of initiatives.