Abstract

There is increasing interest in studying psychotic symptoms in non-clinical populations, with the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences-Positive scale (CAPE-P15) being one of the self-screening questionnaires used most commonly for this purpose. Further research is needed to evaluate the ability of the scale to accurately identify and classify positive psychotic experiences (PE) in the general population. To provide psychometric evidence about the accuracy of the CAPE-P15 for detecting PE in a sample of Chilean adolescents from the general population and classifying them according to their PE severity levels. We administered the CAPE-P15 to a general sample of 1594 students aged 12 to 19. Based on Item Response Theory (IRT), we tested the accuracy of the instrument using two main parameters: difficulty and discrimination power of the 15 items. We found that the scale provides very accurate information about PE, particularly for high PE levels. The items with the highest capability to determine the presence of the latent trait were those assessing perceptual anomalies (auditory and visual hallucinations), bizarre experiences (a double has taken the place of others; being controlled by external forces), and persecutory ideation (conspiracy against me). The CAPE-P15 is an accurate and suitable tool to screen PE and to accurately classify and differentiate PE levels in adolescents from the general population. Further research is needed to better understand how maladaptive psychological mechanisms influence relationships between PE and suicidal ideation (SI) in the general population.

Highlights

  • Detection of psychotic experiences (PE) has been recommended for mental health prevention [1], among adolescents and youths [2]

  • We found that the scale provides very accurate information about PE, for high PE levels

  • The items with the highest capability to determine the presence of the latent trait were those assessing perceptual anomalies, bizarre

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Summary

Introduction

Detection of psychotic experiences (PE) has been recommended for mental health prevention [1], among adolescents and youths [2]. The current capability to identify psychotic manifestations in clinical and general populations is sub-optimal [3]. 50–62% of patients with psychotic symptoms are not identified in the first contact with mental healthcare services [4], and only 5.2% of cases of emerging first-episode psychosis are detected in secondary mental health services [5]. There is increasing interest in studying psychotic symptoms in non-clinical populations, with the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences-Positive scale (CAPE-P15) being one of the self-screening questionnaires used most commonly for this purpose. Further research is needed to evaluate the ability of the scale to accurately identify and classify positive psychotic experiences (PE) in the general population

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