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Social and psychological contributions to the co-occurrence of sub-threshold psychotic experiences and suicidal behavior

Purpose Psychotic experiences and suicidal behavior commonly co-occur in the general population, which can have implications for suicide prevention approaches. However, little is known about the nature of this relation in non-clinical samples. This cross-sectional study aimed to address a research g...

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Published in:Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 2015-12, Vol.50 (12), p.1819-1830
Main Authors: DeVylder, Jordan E., Jahn, Danielle R., Doherty, Tracie, Wilson, Camille S., Wilcox, Holly C., Schiffman, Jason, Hilimire, Matthew R.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Purpose Psychotic experiences and suicidal behavior commonly co-occur in the general population, which can have implications for suicide prevention approaches. However, little is known about the nature of this relation in non-clinical samples. This cross-sectional study aimed to address a research gap by testing whether the relation between psychotic experiences and suicide-related outcomes (ideation, intent, and attempts) is explained by common social and psychological factors. Methods Young adult college students ( N  = 590) were assessed for psychotic experiences, suicidal behavior, and a comprehensive set of 24 potential shared risk factors selected through review of past epidemiological studies and meta-analyses. Nonparametric bootstrapped regression models were used to examine whether these factors attenuated or eliminated the associations between psychotic experiences and suicide-related outcomes. Results Psychotic experiences were associated with greater risk for suicidal ideation and behaviors. Adjustment for psychosocial factors, particularly those contributing to cumulative stress, accounted for the associations between psychotic experiences and suicide-related outcomes, except broadly defined suicidal ideation. Conclusions These results suggest that the robust associations between psychotic experiences and suicidal behavior demonstrated in past studies may be primarily explained by shared risk factors, rather than by causal relations. In our sample, suicidal behavior and sub-threshold psychosis appear to be trans diagnostic clinical outcomes that share common causes, notably cumulative stress, but do not cause one another.
ISSN:0933-7954
1433-9285
DOI:10.1007/s00127-015-1139-6