Publications by authors named "Lorna Staines"

Introduction: Psychosis often develops gradually along a continuum of severity. Little is known about the role of protective factors such as positive affect (PA) in the development of psychotic experiences (PEs). This study investigated i) the temporal (between-day) and contemporaneous (within-day) daily associations between PA and PEs in individuals at different early clinical stages for psychosis and ii) whether these associations differed per clinical stage.

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Article Synopsis
  • Prenatal and perinatal complications, such as maternal smoking and severe anemia, have been linked to an increased frequency of distressing psychotic experiences (PEs) in children.
  • The study used data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study, analyzing a large cohort of children and employing various statistical models to track PEs over time.
  • Key findings indicate that maternal behaviors and a higher number of prenatal complications significantly raised the risk of PEs, while perinatal complications showed no discernible impact.
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Background And Hypothesis: Psychotic experiences (PEs) are associated with increased risk for mental disorders, in particular persistent PEs. PEs therefore might be useful within intervention research. We sought to systematically determine the incidence and persistence of PEs in the general population.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the connection between transient psychotic experiences (PE) during childhood and the quality of adult psychosocial outcomes, highlighting that individuals with PE often have worse self-esteem and relationship stress, regardless of whether they have mental disorders.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 103 participants over a decade, measuring variables like mental disorders, attachment styles, and psychosocial outcomes through standardized assessments.
  • Results showed that childhood PE was linked to lower self-esteem and higher relationship stress, and while mental disorders alone did not show similar effects, adult attachment styles played a moderating role in these outcomes.
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Psychotic experiences (PE) are common in the general population, in particular in childhood, adolescence and young adulthood. PE have been shown to be associated with an increased risk for later psychotic disorders, mental disorders, and poorer functioning. Recent findings have highlighted the relevance of PE to many fields of healthcare, including treatment response in clinical services for anxiety & depression treatment, healthcare costs and service use.

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Psychotic experiences (PEs) such as hallucinations and delusions are common among young people without psychiatric diagnoses and are associated with connectivity and white matter abnormalities, particularly in the limbic system. Using diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in adolescents with reported PEs and matched controls, we examined the cingulum white matter tract along its length rather than as the usually reported single indivisible structure. Complex regional differences in diffusion metrics were found along the bundle at key loci following Bonferroni significance adjustment (p < .

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Importance: The understanding of the development of psychopathology has been hampered by a reliance on cross-sectional data and symptom- or disorder-centered methods. Person-centered methods can accommodate both the problems of comorbidity and the movement between different psychopathological states at different phases of development.

Objective: To examine the profiles and map the trajectories of psychopathology from early childhood to late adolescence.

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Introduction: Duration of risk symptoms (DUR) in people at clinical high risk for psychosis (CHR-P) has been related to poorer clinical outcomes, such as reduced functioning, but it is currently unclear how different symptoms emerge as well as their link with cognitive deficits. To address these questions, we examined the duration of basic symptoms (BS) and attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS) in a sample of CHR-P participants to test the hypothesis that BS precede the manifestation of APS. As a secondary objective, we investigated the relationship between DUR, functioning and neuropsychological deficits.

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