Division of Psychology and Mental Health, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK.
Division of Psychology and Mental Health, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK; Greater Manchester Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK.
Schizophr Res. 2018 Feb;192:124-130. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2017.04.050. Epub 2017 May 9.
Early signs interventions show promise but could be further developed. A recent review suggested that 'basic symptoms' should be added to conventional early signs to improve relapse prediction. This study builds on preliminary evidence that basic symptoms predict relapse and aimed to: 1. examine which phenomena participants report prior to relapse and how they describe them; 2. determine the best way of identifying pre-relapse basic symptoms; 3. assess current practice by comparing self- and casenote-reported pre-relapse experiences.
Participants with non-affective psychosis were recruited from UK mental health services. In-depth interviews (n=23), verbal checklists of basic symptoms (n=23) and casenote extracts (n=208) were analysed using directed content analysis and non-parametric statistical tests.
Three-quarters of interviewees reported basic symptoms and all reported conventional early signs and 'other' pre-relapse experiences. Interviewees provided rich descriptions of basic symptoms. Verbal checklist interviews asking specifically about basic symptoms identified these experiences more readily than open questions during in-depth interviews. Only 5% of casenotes recorded basic symptoms; interviewees were 16 times more likely to report basic symptoms than their casenotes did.
The majority of interviewees self-reported pre-relapse basic symptoms when asked specifically about these experiences but very few casenotes reported these symptoms. Basic symptoms may be potent predictors of relapse that clinicians miss. A self-report measure would aid monitoring of basic symptoms in routine clinical practice and would facilitate a prospective investigation comparing basic symptoms and conventional early signs as predictors of relapse.
早期症状干预措施显示出前景,但仍有进一步发展的空间。最近的一项综述表明,应该在传统的早期症状中添加“基本症状”,以提高复发预测的准确性。本研究基于基本症状可以预测复发的初步证据,旨在:1. 研究参与者在复发前报告的现象以及他们如何描述这些现象;2. 确定识别复发前基本症状的最佳方法;3. 通过比较自我报告和病历报告的复发前经历来评估当前的实践。
从英国精神卫生服务机构招募非情感性精神病患者。使用定向内容分析法和非参数统计检验对 23 名参与者的深入访谈、23 名参与者的基本症状口头检查表和 208 名参与者的病历摘录进行分析。
三分之二的受访者报告了基本症状,所有人都报告了传统的早期症状和“其他”复发前的经历。受访者对基本症状进行了丰富的描述。在深入访谈中,口头检查表访谈询问特定的基本症状比开放式问题更能轻易识别这些经历。只有 5%的病历记录了基本症状;受访者报告基本症状的可能性是其病历报告的 16 倍。
当被问及这些经历时,大多数受访者会自我报告复发前的基本症状,但很少有病历报告这些症状。基本症状可能是临床医生错过的复发的有力预测因素。自我报告量表将有助于在常规临床实践中监测基本症状,并促进比较基本症状和传统早期症状作为复发预测指标的前瞻性研究。