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Negative cognition, affect, metacognition and dimensions of paranoia in people at ultra-high risk of psychosis: a multi-level modelling analysis.

Authors :
Morrison, A. P.
Shryane, N.
Fowler, D.
Birchwood, M.
Gumley, A. I.
Taylor, H. E.
French, P.
Stewart, S. L. K.
Jones, P. B.
Lewis, S. W.
Bentall, R. P.
Source :
Psychological Medicine. Sep2015, Vol. 45 Issue 12, p2675-2684. 10p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

BackgroundParanoia is one of the commonest symptoms of psychosis but has rarely been studied in a population at risk of developing psychosis. Based on existing theoretical models, including the proposed distinction between ‘poor me’ and ‘bad me’ paranoia, we aimed to test specific predictions about associations between negative cognition, metacognitive beliefs and negative emotions and paranoid ideation and the belief that persecution is deserved (deservedness).MethodWe used data from 117 participants from the Early Detection and Intervention Evaluation for people at risk of psychosis (EDIE-2) trial of cognitive–behaviour therapy, comparing them with samples of psychiatric in-patients and healthy students from a previous study. Multi-level modelling was utilized to examine predictors of both paranoia and deservedness, with post-hoc planned comparisons conducted to test whether person-level predictor variables were associated differentially with paranoia or with deservedness.ResultsOur sample of at-risk mental state participants was not as paranoid, but reported higher levels of ‘bad-me’ deservedness, compared with psychiatric in-patients. We found several predictors of paranoia and deservedness. Negative beliefs about self were related to deservedness but not paranoia, whereas negative beliefs about others were positively related to paranoia but negatively with deservedness. Both depression and negative metacognitive beliefs about paranoid thinking were specifically related to paranoia but not deservedness.ConclusionsThis study provides evidence for the role of negative cognition, metacognition and negative affect in the development of paranoid beliefs, which has implications for psychological interventions and our understanding of psychosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00332917
Volume :
45
Issue :
12
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Psychological Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108714357
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291715000689