Childhood Adversities Increase the Risk of Psychosis: A Meta-analysis of Patient-Control, Prospective- and Cross-sectional Cohort Studies
University of Liverpool · University of Manchester · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Evidence suggests that adverse experiences in childhood are associated with psychosis. To examine the association between childhood adversity and trauma (sexual abuse, physical abuse, emotional/psychological abuse, neglect, parental death, and bullying) and psychosis outcome, MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsychINFO, and Web of Science were searched from January 1980 through November 2011. We included prospective cohort studies, large-scale cross-sectional studies investigating the association between childhood adversity and psychotic symptoms or illness, case-control studies comparing the prevalence of adverse events between psychotic patients and controls using dichotomous or continuous measures, and case-control studies…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 135.38
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Psychosis
- Prospective cohort study
- Psychiatry
- Population
- Sexual abuse
- Medicine
- Cohort study
- Cross-sectional study
- Gender equality