Yehya Arij, Khaled Salma M, Sommer Iris E C, Woodruff Peter, Daher-Nashif Suhad
Core Curriculum Program, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar.
Social and Economic Survey Research Institute, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar.
Front Psychiatry. 2022 Sep 23;13:988913. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.988913. eCollection 2022.
Psychotic-like experiences (PLEs) are hallucinatory or delusional experiences that fall below the threshold of a diagnosable psychotic disorder. Although PLEs are common across the spectrum of psychiatric disorders, they also have been commonly reported in the general population. In this study, we aimed to describe the types of PLEs experienced by university students in Qatar. Furthermore, we aimed to examine how students frame, explain, and deal with these experiences as well as understand how culture and religion may shape the way students attribute and respond to these experiences.
This study used a qualitative phenomenological approach. For collecting the data, we conducted semi-structured interviews using the Questionnaire for Psychotic Experiences (QPE). The QPE is a valid and reliable tool to assess the phenomenology of psychotic-like experiences. The questionnaire was translated into Arabic and tested and validated in Qatar (a fast-developing Muslim country in the Arabian Peninsula). We conducted interviews in Arabic with 12 undergraduate female students at Qatar University (the only national university in Qatar). The interviewees were of different Arab nationalities. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and two authors conducted the content-thematic analysis separately, as a strategy to validate the findings. The study was part of a larger nationally funded project that was approved by the Qatar University Institutional Review Board. The approvals were granted before any interview was conducted.
The PLEs were prevalent in our non-clinical sample. The content-thematic analysis revealed the following main themes about these experiences: type, impact on daily function, frequency, immediate reaction, attribution style, assumptions about the root cause of these experiences, other associations, and religious links to experiences. The results also highlighted that religion and culture play a role in shaping the types of hallucinations and some delusions.
Our findings support the importance of culture and religion in relation to the types and explanations that students provided when describing PLEs. Notably, it was common among those who reported having these experiences to normalize and link PLEs to real-life events. This may be a defense mechanism to protect the self against the stigma of mental illness and from being labeled as "abnormal".
类精神病性体验(PLEs)是指低于可诊断精神病性障碍阈值的幻觉或妄想体验。尽管PLEs在各种精神障碍中都很常见,但在普通人群中也经常有报告。在本研究中,我们旨在描述卡塔尔大学生所经历的PLEs类型。此外,我们旨在研究学生如何构建、解释和处理这些体验,以及了解文化和宗教如何塑造学生对这些体验的归因和反应方式。
本研究采用定性现象学方法。为收集数据,我们使用《精神病性体验问卷》(QPE)进行半结构化访谈。QPE是评估类精神病性体验现象学的有效且可靠的工具。该问卷已被翻译成阿拉伯语,并在卡塔尔(阿拉伯半岛一个快速发展的穆斯林国家)进行了测试和验证。我们用阿拉伯语对卡塔尔大学(卡塔尔唯一的国立大学)的12名本科女生进行了访谈。受访者来自不同的阿拉伯国家。访谈内容逐字记录,两位作者分别进行内容主题分析,作为验证研究结果的一种策略。该研究是一个更大的国家资助项目的一部分,已获得卡塔尔大学机构审查委员会的批准。在进行任何访谈之前已获得批准。
PLEs在我们的非临床样本中很普遍。内容主题分析揭示了关于这些体验的以下主要主题:类型、对日常功能的影响、频率、即时反应、归因方式、对这些体验根源的假设、其他关联以及与体验的宗教联系。结果还强调,宗教和文化在塑造幻觉和一些妄想的类型方面发挥了作用。
我们的研究结果支持了文化和宗教在学生描述PLEs时所提供的类型和解释方面的重要性。值得注意的是,在那些报告有这些体验的人中,将PLEs正常化并与现实生活事件联系起来是很常见的。这可能是一种自我保护机制,以防止精神疾病的污名化并避免被贴上“异常”的标签。