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Sleep and paranoia: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Sleep dysfunction commonly co-occurs with paranoia and is hypothesised to be a contributory causal mechanism in its development and maintenance. To systematically review and quantitatively evaluate the evidence for the relationship between sleep dysfunction and paranoia across the spectrum of severi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Clinical psychology review 2024-12, Vol.114, p.102503, Article 102503
Main Authors: Brown, Poppy, Reeve, Sarah, Hotton, Matthew, Steer, Natalie, Steel, Craig
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Sleep dysfunction commonly co-occurs with paranoia and is hypothesised to be a contributory causal mechanism in its development and maintenance. To systematically review and quantitatively evaluate the evidence for the relationship between sleep dysfunction and paranoia across the spectrum of severity. A systematic search was conducted to identify studies investigating the relationship between aspects of sleep and paranoia across clinical and non-clinical groups. A random effects model using a Fisher r-to-z transformed correlation coefficient was used for meta-analysis. 45 studies were included in the review and 14 in the meta-analysis. The literature supports a small-to-moderate association (r = 0.30, 95 % CI: 0.16–0.40 for the seven studies using the most robust measures) with significant heterogeneity among studies but no evidence of publication bias. There is evidence that the relationship is to some extent causal, with sleep disruption leading to increased paranoia, though there is also some evidence of a bi-directional relationship. Negative affect is frequently seen as a mediator of this relationship. This review for the first time examines the significant relationship between sleep and paranoia individually. Studies are needed that further assess the potential for early intervention of sleep dysfunction in those experiencing paranoia. •There is no existing review or meta-analysis assessing the relationship between sleep and paranoia specifically•The meta-analysis quantitively found a small-to-medium significant association•The review found up-to-date evidence of an often bi-directional causal relationship, typically mediated by negative affect
ISSN:0272-7358
1873-7811
1873-7811
DOI:10.1016/j.cpr.2024.102503