reviewPsychological MedicineJul 31, 2012Closed access

An updated and conservative systematic review and meta-analysis of epidemiological evidence on psychotic experiences in children and adults: on the pathway from proneness to persistence to dimensional expression across mental disorders

Maastricht University · European Graduate School of Neuroscience · +3 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

The psychosis-proneness-persistence-impairment model of psychotic disorder incorporates notions of both phenomenological and temporal continuity (persistence) of psychotic experiences (PE), but not structural continuity. Specific testable propositions of phenomenological continuity and persistence are identified. Method Propositions are tested by systematic reviews of the epidemiology of PE, persistence of PE and disorder outcomes, and meta-analyses (including Monte Carlo permutation sampling, MCPS) of reported rates and odds ratios (ORs).

Results

Estimates of the incidence and prevalence of PE obtained from 61 cohorts revealed a median annual incidence of 2.5% and a prevalence of 7.2%. Meta-analysis of risk factors identified age, minority or migrant status, income, education, employment, marital status, alcohol use, cannabis use, stress, urbanicity and family history of mental illness as important predictors of PE. The mode of assessment accounted for significant variance in the observed rates. Across cohorts, the probability of persistence was very strongly related to the rate of PE at baseline. Of those who report PE, ∼20% go on to experience persistent PE whereas for ∼80%, PE remit over time. Of those with baseline PE, 7.4% develop a psychotic disorder outcome.

Citation impact

1,185
total citations
FWCI
25.50
Percentile
100%
References
129
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Epidemiology
  • Persistence (discontinuity)
  • Psychology
  • Mental illness
  • Psychiatry
  • Meta-analysis
  • Clinical psychology
  • Psychosis
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
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