Katherine G Jonas1, Kristian E Markon. 1. University of Iowa, E11 Seashore Hall, Iowa City, IA 52240, USA. katherine.grace.jonas@gmail.com
Abstract
PURPOSE: Some studies suggest that positive symptoms of psychosis-clinical and sub-clinical alike-reflect a single, continuously distributed dimension in the population. It is unknown, however, whether such a spectrum of positive psychotic experiences is non-linearly related to outcomes such as daily functioning. This work aims to characterize the relationship between positive psychosis and impairment. METHODS: Data from the Office of National Statistics National Psychiatric Morbidity Surveys of Great Britain were used to establish measurement models of psychosis and impairment. Competing linear and nonlinear models of the relationship between the two latent variables were evaluated using mixture structural equation models. RESULTS: Positive psychosis is best modeled by a continuous, normal distribution. Increases in positive psychosis correlate with roughly linear increases in impairment. CONCLUSIONS: Positive psychotic symptoms occur throughout the population without a discrete, pathological threshold. Functional deficits are linearly associated with the psychosis at all points along the continuum, and a significant portion of the population experiences subclinical psychosis.
PURPOSE: Some studies suggest that positive symptoms of psychosis-clinical and sub-clinical alike-reflect a single, continuously distributed dimension in the population. It is unknown, however, whether such a spectrum of positive psychotic experiences is non-linearly related to outcomes such as daily functioning. This work aims to characterize the relationship between positive psychosis and impairment. METHODS: Data from the Office of National Statistics National Psychiatric Morbidity Surveys of Great Britain were used to establish measurement models of psychosis and impairment. Competing linear and nonlinear models of the relationship between the two latent variables were evaluated using mixture structural equation models. RESULTS: Positive psychosis is best modeled by a continuous, normal distribution. Increases in positive psychosis correlate with roughly linear increases in impairment. CONCLUSIONS: Positive psychotic symptoms occur throughout the population without a discrete, pathological threshold. Functional deficits are linearly associated with the psychosis at all points along the continuum, and a significant portion of the population experiences subclinical psychosis.
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