Self-Reported Psychotic Symptoms in the General Population: Correlates in an Iranian Urban Area

Background: Psychosis exists in the community as a continuum of severity. Here, we examine the correlates of self-reported psychotic symptoms in an urban catchment area of Iran. Sampling and Methods: Two thousand one hundred and fifty-eight participants (age 18–65 years) residing in southern Tehran...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychopathology 2012-10, Vol.45 (6), p.374-380
Hauptverfasser: Sharifi, Vandad, Bakhshaie, Jafar, Hatmi, Zeinab, Faghih-Nasiri, Lida, Sadeghianmehr, Zahra, Mirkia, Sholeh, Darbooy, Shadan, Effatpanah, Mohammad, Mirsharifa, Seyyed Mehdi
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container_end_page 380
container_issue 6
container_start_page 374
container_title Psychopathology
container_volume 45
creator Sharifi, Vandad
Bakhshaie, Jafar
Hatmi, Zeinab
Faghih-Nasiri, Lida
Sadeghianmehr, Zahra
Mirkia, Sholeh
Darbooy, Shadan
Effatpanah, Mohammad
Mirsharifa, Seyyed Mehdi
description Background: Psychosis exists in the community as a continuum of severity. Here, we examine the correlates of self-reported psychotic symptoms in an urban catchment area of Iran. Sampling and Methods: Two thousand one hundred and fifty-eight participants (age 18–65 years) residing in southern Tehran (the capital city of Iran) were interviewed using the psychoticism and paranoia dimensions of the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R) to assess the severity of psychotic symptoms. Other dimensions of the SCL-90-R assessing nonpsychotic symptoms and a sociodemographic questionnaire were also used. Paykel’s Interview for Recent Life Events was used to assess stressful life events. Results: Independent associations were observed between younger age, female gender, stressful life events and dimensions of depression, anxiety, hostility, obsessive-compulsive symptoms and interpersonal sensitivity and psychoticism. Independent associations were also observed for marital problems, unemployment, stressful life events and dimensions of depression, anxiety, hostility, interpersonal sensitivity and phobic anxiety with paranoid ideation. There was also a trend toward an association between higher educational levels and the severity of psychotic symptoms, particularly paranoid ideation. Conclusions: Most of the previously accepted correlations for psychotic symptoms in the community were replicated. An unexpected association between paranoia and female gender, and a trend toward higher rates of psychotic symptoms in more educated participants, were in contrast with the studies in developed settings. The insufficient coverage of psychosis-relevant questions from the SCL-90-R for the entire psychotic diagnostic spectrum should be considered a limitation.
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Independent associations were also observed for marital problems, unemployment, stressful life events and dimensions of depression, anxiety, hostility, interpersonal sensitivity and phobic anxiety with paranoid ideation. There was also a trend toward an association between higher educational levels and the severity of psychotic symptoms, particularly paranoid ideation. Conclusions: Most of the previously accepted correlations for psychotic symptoms in the community were replicated. An unexpected association between paranoia and female gender, and a trend toward higher rates of psychotic symptoms in more educated participants, were in contrast with the studies in developed settings. 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Here, we examine the correlates of self-reported psychotic symptoms in an urban catchment area of Iran. Sampling and Methods: Two thousand one hundred and fifty-eight participants (age 18–65 years) residing in southern Tehran (the capital city of Iran) were interviewed using the psychoticism and paranoia dimensions of the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R) to assess the severity of psychotic symptoms. Other dimensions of the SCL-90-R assessing nonpsychotic symptoms and a sociodemographic questionnaire were also used. Paykel’s Interview for Recent Life Events was used to assess stressful life events. Results: Independent associations were observed between younger age, female gender, stressful life events and dimensions of depression, anxiety, hostility, obsessive-compulsive symptoms and interpersonal sensitivity and psychoticism. Independent associations were also observed for marital problems, unemployment, stressful life events and dimensions of depression, anxiety, hostility, interpersonal sensitivity and phobic anxiety with paranoid ideation. There was also a trend toward an association between higher educational levels and the severity of psychotic symptoms, particularly paranoid ideation. Conclusions: Most of the previously accepted correlations for psychotic symptoms in the community were replicated. An unexpected association between paranoia and female gender, and a trend toward higher rates of psychotic symptoms in more educated participants, were in contrast with the studies in developed settings. The insufficient coverage of psychosis-relevant questions from the SCL-90-R for the entire psychotic diagnostic spectrum should be considered a limitation.</abstract><cop>Basel, Switzerland</cop><pub>Karger</pub><pmid>22854278</pmid><doi>10.1159/000337749</doi><tpages>7</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source Karger Journals; MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Age Factors
Aged
Anxiety - epidemiology
Biological and medical sciences
Correlation analysis
Cross-Sectional Studies
Delusions - epidemiology
Depression - epidemiology
Family Conflict
Female
Hallucinations - epidemiology
Humans
Iran - epidemiology
Life Change Events
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Neuroses
Original Paper
Other psychotic disorders
Paranoid Behavior - epidemiology
Population biology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Psychoses
Psychotic Disorders - epidemiology
Risk Factors
Self Report
Sex Factors
Urban areas
Urban Population - statistics & numerical data
title Self-Reported Psychotic Symptoms in the General Population: Correlates in an Iranian Urban Area
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