Bell Victoria, Velthorst Eva, Almansa Jorge, Myin-Germeys Inez, Shergill Sukhi, Fett Anne-Kathrin
Department of Psychosis Studies, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience (IoPPN), King's College London, London, UK.
GGZ Noord-Holland-Noord, Heerhugowaard, the Netherlands.
Schizophr Res Cogn. 2023 Mar 24;33:100282. doi: 10.1016/j.scog.2023.100282. eCollection 2023 Sep.
The role of loneliness and social exclusion in the development of paranoia is largely unexplored. Negative affect may mediate potential associations between these factors. We investigated the temporal relationships of daily-life loneliness, felt social exclusion, negative affect, and paranoia across the psychosis continuum.
Seventy-five participants, including 29 individuals with a diagnosis of non-affective psychosis, 20 first-degree relatives, and 26 controls used an Experience Sampling Method (ESM) app to capture the fluctuations in loneliness, feelings of social exclusion, paranoia, and negative affect across a 1-week period. Data were analysed with multilevel regression analyses.
In all groups, loneliness and feelings of social exclusion were independent predictors of paranoia over time (b = 0.05, < .001 and b = 0.04, < .05, respectively). Negative affect predicted paranoia (b = 0.17, < .001) and partially mediated the associations between loneliness, social exclusion, and paranoia. It also predicted loneliness (b = 0.15, < .0001), but not social exclusion (b = 0.04, = .21) over time. Paranoia predicted social exclusion over time, with more pronounced effects in controls (b = 0.43) than patients (b = 0.19; relatives: b = 0.17); but not loneliness (b = 0.08, = .16).
Paranoia and negative affect worsen in all groups following feelings of loneliness and social exclusion. This highlights the importance of a sense of belonging and being included for mental well-being. Loneliness, feeling socially excluded, and negative affect were independent predictors of paranoid thinking, suggesting they represent useful targets in its treatment.
孤独和社会排斥在偏执狂发展中的作用在很大程度上尚未得到探索。消极情绪可能介导这些因素之间的潜在关联。我们研究了精神病连续体中日常生活中的孤独感、感受到的社会排斥、消极情绪和偏执狂之间的时间关系。
75名参与者,包括29名被诊断为非情感性精神病的个体、20名一级亲属和26名对照者,使用经验抽样法(ESM)应用程序来捕捉1周内孤独感、社会排斥感、偏执狂和消极情绪的波动。数据采用多水平回归分析进行分析。
在所有组中,随着时间的推移,孤独感和社会排斥感是偏执狂的独立预测因素(分别为b = 0.05,p <.001和b = 0.04,p <.05)。消极情绪预测偏执狂(b = 0.17,p <.001),并部分介导孤独感、社会排斥和偏执狂之间的关联。随着时间的推移,它还预测孤独感(b = 0.15,p <.0001),但不预测社会排斥感(b = 0.04,p =.21)。随着时间的推移,偏执狂预测社会排斥感,在对照组(b = 0.43)中的影响比患者(b = 0.19;亲属:b = 0.17)更明显;但不预测孤独感(b = 0.08,p =.16)。
在所有组中,孤独感和社会排斥感之后,偏执狂和消极情绪会恶化。这凸显了归属感和被接纳感对心理健康的重要性。孤独感、感到被社会排斥和消极情绪是偏执思维的独立预测因素,表明它们是治疗偏执思维的有用靶点。