Abstract

Objective: Psychotic symptoms are prevalent in both clinical settings and the general population. The distribution of psychotic symptoms across patients with different types of psychotic and non-psychotic mental disorders is helpful for understanding symptom specificity. This study aimed to explore the distribution differences of psychotic symptoms in an outpatient population in terms of frequency, age, gender, and psychotic and non-psychotic disorders. Methods: Outpatients were recruited consecutively at their first visit to the Shanghai Mental Health Center. Psychotic symptoms over the preceding year were self-reported through the PRIME Screen-Revised (PS-R) questionnaire. Seven categories of psychotic symptoms were grouped: perplexity and delusional mood (Item-1,5); first rank symptoms (Item-3,6,11); overvalued beliefs (Item-2,4); suspiciousness/persecutory ideas (Item-7), grandiose ideas (Item 8), perceptual abnormalities (Item-9,10), and disorganized communication (Item-12). Comparisons were made with respect to age group, sex, and diagnostic category. Results: Of 2542 outpatients, 1448(57.0%) were screened as positive, which was defined as having two or more symptoms with at least “somewhat agree” scores, ranging from 0 to 6. The threshold of one or more “yes” items was an endorsement to categorize the participant as positive for psychotic symptoms. The frequency of psychotic symptoms declined with age. Younger patients tended to report more psychotic symptoms than older patients(p < .001). Suspiciousness(p = .038) and disorganized communication (p = .004) were more common in females than males. Age, first rank symptoms, suspiciousness/persecutory ideas, grandiose ideas, and perceptual abnormalities were found to significantly differ between psychotic and non-psychotic disorders. Conclusions: Psychotic symptoms appear to be common in the clinical population and represent nonspecific indicators of psychopathology. The difference between psychotic and non-psychotic psychopathologies is more a function of the presence, frequency, and severity of psychotic symptoms.

Full Text
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