Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, USA; VA Connecticut Health Care System, 950 Campbell Ave, West Haven, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, USA.
Schizophr Res. 2023 May;255:52-58. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2023.03.018. Epub 2023 Mar 22.
People with schizophrenia are frequently victims of violence. Previous attempts to examine the reasons for this have mostly used cross-sectional designs that limit the ability to distinguish, among the correlates they identify, potential causes of victimization from its consequences.
We studied patients with schizophrenia participating in the NIMH-funded Clinical Antipsychotic Treatment for Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) trial. The dependent variable was self-reported victimization during the 18-month CATIE follow-up. Independent variables were assessed at study entry and included demographics, childhood experiences, recent victimization and violent behavior, social circumstances, and mental health symptoms. Bivariate and multivariate analyses examined correlates of victimization and, among those victimized, the correlates of also acting violently oneself.
Of 1179 participants, 206 (17.5 %) reported one or more incidents where they were victimized over the 18-months. Over a third had been hit with a fist or an object. Most perpetrators were family or acquaintances. Controlling for other variables, victimization was associated with having been recently victimized at baseline as well as with sexual abuse in childhood, frequent interactions with close friends and depressive, but not schizophrenia, symptoms. Victimized participants who reported acting violently themselves (113; 55%) were more likely to report violent behavior at baseline and frequent interactions with close friends.
Victimization in schizophrenia is often associated with aggressive behavior by the victim and is more often related to social involvement, past trauma, substance use and depression than to schizophrenia symptoms. Treatments that encourage socialization may incur an unintended risk of victimization.
精神分裂症患者经常成为暴力的受害者。此前,研究人员试图探讨导致这一现象的原因,但大多采用的是横断面设计,这限制了他们从所确定的相关性中区分出受害的潜在原因和后果的能力。
我们研究了参加美国国立精神卫生研究院资助的临床抗精神病治疗干预效应(CATIE)试验的精神分裂症患者。因变量为 CATIE 随访的 18 个月期间自我报告的受害情况。在研究开始时评估了独立变量,包括人口统计学特征、童年经历、近期受害和暴力行为、社会环境和精神健康症状。采用双变量和多变量分析方法来检查受害的相关性,以及在受害人群中,自身也实施暴力行为的相关性。
在 1179 名参与者中,有 206 名(17.5%)报告在 18 个月期间发生了一次或多次受害事件。超过三分之一的人曾被拳头或物体击中。大多数加害者是家人或熟人。在控制其他变量的情况下,最近在基线时受到伤害以及童年时遭受过性虐待、与密友频繁互动以及抑郁但非精神分裂症症状与受害有关。报告自己实施过暴力行为的受害参与者(113 人,占 55%)更有可能在基线时报告暴力行为以及与密友的频繁互动。
精神分裂症患者的受害情况通常与受害者的攻击行为有关,并且更常与社会参与、过去的创伤、物质使用和抑郁有关,而与精神分裂症症状无关。鼓励社交的治疗方法可能会带来意想不到的受害风险。