AI Article Synopsis

  • Hostility and aggressive behaviors in patients with psychotic disorders are influenced by demographic and clinical risk factors, childhood adversity, and unmet care needs.
  • A study involving 1,119 patients over six years revealed low yearly incidences of hostility (2.8%), safety-to-others (0.8%), and maltreatment (1.8%), with safety-to-others needs being linked to previous hostility and impulsivity.
  • The findings indicate that while hostility and maltreatment are related to childhood adversity and male sex, neither aggression categories were tied to premorbid adjustment problems, suggesting complex relationships among these factors.

Article Abstract

Hostility and aggressive behavior in patients with psychotic disorders are associated with demographic and clinical risk factors, as well as with childhood adversity and neglect. Care needs are an essential concept in clinical practice; care needs in the domain of safety for others reflect the actual problem the patient has. Hostility, aggressive behavior, and associated care needs, however, are often studied in retrospect. In a sample of 1,119 patients with non-affective psychotic disorders, who were interviewed three times over a period of 6 years, we calculated the incidence of hostility, self-reported maltreatment to others and care needs associated with safety for other people (safety-to-others). Regression analysis was used to analyze the association between these outcomes and risk factors. The population attributable fraction (PAF) was used to calculate the proportion of the outcome that could potentially be prevented if previous expressions of adverse behavior were eliminated. The yearly incidence of hostility was 2.8%, for safety-to-others 0.8% and for maltreatment this was 1.8%. Safety-to-others was associated with previous hostility and vice versa, but, assuming causality, only 18% of the safety-to-others needs was attributable to previous hostility while 26% was attributable to impulsivity. Hostility, maltreatment and safety-to-others were all associated with number of unmet needs, suicidal ideation and male sex. Hostility and maltreatment, but not safety-to-others, were associated with childhood adversity. Neither safety-to-others, maltreatment nor hostility were associated with premorbid adjustment problems. The incidence of hostility, self-reported aggressive behaviors, and associated care needs is low and linked to childhood adversity. Known risk factors for prevalence also apply to incidence and for care needs associated with safety for other people. Clinical symptoms can index aggressive behaviors years later, providing clinicians with some opportunity for preventing future incidents.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6961536PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00934DOI Listing

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