| Literature DB >> 32153431 |
Ann K Shinn1,2, Jonathan D Wolff2,3, Melissa Hwang1, Lauren A M Lebois2,3,4, Mathew A Robinson2,3, Sherry R Winternitz2,3, Dost Öngür1,2, Kerry J Ressler2,4, Milissa L Kaufman2,3.
Abstract
Voice hearing (VH) can occur in trauma spectrum disorders (TSD) such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and dissociative disorders. However, previous estimates of VH among individuals with TSD vary widely. In this study, we sought to better characterize the rate and phenomenology of VH in a sample of 70 women with TSD related to childhood abuse who were receiving care in a specialized trauma program. We compared the rate of VH within our sample using two different measures: 1) the auditory hallucination (AH) item in the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV-TR (SCID), and 2) the thirteen questions involving VH in the Multidimensional Inventory of Dissociation (MID), a self-report questionnaire that comprehensively assesses pathological dissociation. We found that 45.7% of our sample met threshold for SCID AH, while 91.4% met criteria for MID VH. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analyses showed that while SCID AH and MID VH items have greater than chance agreement, the strength of agreement is only moderate, suggesting that SCID and MID VH items measure related but not identical constructs. Thirty-two patients met criteria for both SCID AH and at least one MID VH item ("unequivocal VH"), 32 for at least one MID VH item but not SCID AH ("ambiguous VH"), and 6 met criteria for neither ("unequivocal non-VH"). Relative to the ambiguous VH group, the unequivocal VH group had higher dissociation scores for child voices, and higher mean frequencies for child voices and Schneiderian voices. Our findings suggest that VH in women with TSD related to childhood abuse is common, but that the rate of VH depends on how the question is asked. We review prior studies examining AH and/or VH in TSD, focusing on the measures used to ascertain these experiences, and conclude that our two estimates are consistent with previous studies that used comparable instruments and patient samples. Our results add to growing evidence that VH-an experience typically considered psychotic or psychotic-like-is not equivalent to having a psychotic disorder. Instruments that assess VH apart from psychotic disorders and that capture their multidimensional nature may improve identification of VH, especially among patients with non-psychotic disorders.Entities:
Keywords: assessment; auditory hallucinations; dissociative disorders; phenomenology; posttraumatic stress disorder; psychosis; voice hearing
Year: 2020 PMID: 32153431 PMCID: PMC7050446 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.01011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Studies of voice hearing in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
| Study | Size of Dx Sample | Female | Sample | Trauma history | Study Setting | Diagnostic | Voice Hearing Measure | Operational Definition/ | Voice Hearing Rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mueser and Butler ( | N = 36 | 0% | Combat veterans with PTSD (mean age 38.8 years) who showed no psychotic symptoms other than AH (in n = 5) | Combat, adulthood | Inpatient unit at a VA Medical Center in California, USA | DSM-III criteria and MMPI ( | “Clinical interviews” | Not specified (but abstract and intro briefly relate AH to “intrusive auditory perceptions,” possibly analogous to intrusive images) | 13.9% AH |
| 2 | Wilcox et al ( | N = 59 | 0% | Combat veterans with PTSD, consecutively treated at clinic in a 3-month period (mean age of sample not specified) | Combat, adulthood | VA outpatient clinic in Texas, USA | DSM-III criteria | Not specified | Not specified (but abstract mentions “intrusive auditory perceptions”) | 28.9% life prevalence of AH |
| 3 | Butler et al ( | N = 20 | 0% | 38 Vietnam-era veterans, not treatment-seeking, with verifiable combat experience in the armed forces (n = 20 with PTSD, mean age 40.2 years, and n = 18 without PTSD, mean age 40.9 years). Exclusion criteria included suspected schizophrenia, psychosis, or major affective disorder. | Combat, adulthood | Veterans’ center in California, USA | DSM-III-R criteria and M-PTSD | SAPS hallucinations subscale | SAPS hallucinations subscale assesses for AH (“Have you heard voices or other sounds when no one is around?”), voices commenting (“Have you ever heard voices commenting on what you are thinking or doing?”), voices conversing (“Have you heard two or more voices talking with each other?”), somatic or tactile hallucinations, olfactory hallucinations, visual hallucinations, and a global rating of hallucination severity. Study authors summed individual subscale items (not including global ratings). | 25.0% with mild-moderate hallucinations (prevalence of individual hallucination items, including AH or first rank VH, not specified) |
| 4 | David et al ( | N = 53 | 0% | Veterans with chronic combat-related PTSD (mean age 46.9y) consecutively admitted | Combat, adulthood | Inpatient PTSD rehab unit in Florida, USA | SCID for DSM-III-R and M-PTSD | SCID for DSM-III-R | SCID DSM-III-R B35: “Did you ever hear things that other people couldn't hear, such as noises, or the voices of people whispering or talking? (Were you awake at the time?)” | 37.7% AH |
| 5 | Hamner et al ( | N = 45 | 0% | Vietnam combat veterans with PTSD but without a primary psychotic disorder seeking treatment in a PTSD clinic (n = 22 with psychotic features, mean age 52.5 years, and n = 23 without psychotic features, mean age 51.1 years). Patients were considered to have psychotic features if they scored ≥4 (moderate or higher severity) on one of the four critical positive items on the PANSS (delusions, conceptual disorganization, hallucinatory behavior, suspiciousness/persecution). | Combat, adulthood | Outpatient PTSD clinic in South Carolina, USA | CAPS and SCID for DSM-III-R | SCID for DSM-III-R psychosis screening module and | SCID DSM-III-R B35 (see above). | 46.7% AH |
| 6 | Scott et al ( | N = 20 | 95% | 66 adolescents (13–18 years) consecutively admitted over 6-month study period (20 with PTSD, 18 with psychotic disorder, 28 with other disorders) | Limited details (sexual abuse in at least five patients with AH) | Adolescent inpatient unit in Brisbane, Australia | K-SADS | K-SADS items related to the form and content of hallucinations | “Has there ever been a time when you heard voices that other people could not hear?”( | 85.0% AH |
| 7a | Brewin and Patel ( | N = 114 | 5% | Military veterans (mean age 36.3 years) receiving pensions for PTSD (93 with current PTSD, 21 with past PTSD) | Combat, adulthood | UK Service Personnel and Veterans Agency; and an ex-servicemen's mental welfare charity | SCID for DSM-IV | DES, a 28-item self-report instrument to screen for dissociative disorders | DES Q27: “Some people find that they sometimes hear voices inside their head that tell them to do things or comment on things that they are doing. Select a number that shows what percentage of the time this happens to you.”( | 59.6% VH |
| 7b | Brewin and Patel ( | N = 30 | 53% | 30 patients (mean age 40.7 years) with PTSD arising primarily from adulthood trauma (50% also reported history of childhood trauma) were compared with trauma controls (n = 13) and depressed patients (n = 39). | Adulthood, 50% also reported childhood trauma in addition to adult trauma. Limited details on type of trauma. | Specialized PTSD clinic in London, UK | DSM-IV criteria for PTSD, confirmed by PSS | Semi-structured interview developed by the authors | Individuals were first asked about the presence of repetitive thoughts in the past week (“a stream of thoughts that repeats a very similar message over and over again inside your head”), and if so whether the individual experienced this as a voice vs. a stream of thoughts | 67.0% repetitive thoughts in the form of VH. “All patients who heard voices regarded them as manifestations of their own thoughts (i.e., as pseudohallucinations)” |
| 8 | Anketell et al ( | N = 40 | 7.5% | Patients with chronic PTSD (mean age 45.2 years) who underwent treatment in outpatient center | Various: serious accident/fire/explosion (82.5%), natural disaster (5%), nonsexual assault (77.5%), sexual assault (15%), sexual contact in childhood (17.5%), combat (72.5%), torture (42.5%), imprisonment (50%), life-threatening illness (20%), other traumatic events (57.5%). No distinction made between childhood versus adult trauma except for childhood sexual contact. | Psychiatric hospital outpatients and outpatient clinic in Belfast, Ireland | PDS (a 49-item self-report measure of DSM-IV PTSD) | PANSS | PANSS P3: “verbal report or behavior indicating perceptions which are not generated by external stimuli. These may occur in the auditory visual, olfactory, or somatic realms.”( | 50.0% current VH |
| 9 | Nygaard et al ( | N = 181 | 42.5% | Trauma-affected refugees (mean age 44.9 years) with PTSD with (n = 74 PTSD-SP) and without (n = 107 PTSD) secondary psychotic features | Torture (63.5% PTSD-SP, 36.4% PTSD), imprisonment (59.5% PTSD-SP, 35.5% PTSD), lived in a war zone (85.1% PTSD-SP, 82.2% PTSD), lived in a refugee camp (25.6% PTSD-SP, 24.3% PTSD), soldier in war (31.1% PTSD-SP, 21.5% PTSD) | Specialized psychiatric unit and treatment center in the Capital Region, Denmark | ICD-10 criteria | Psychiatric records | Definition of AH not explicitly specified, but patients with PTSD with secondary psychotic features (PTSD-SP) defined: 1) psychotic symptoms had to be experienced while awake. 2) Experiences described in relation to sleep (hypnogogic/hypnopompic) not included. 3) Patients with intact reality testing included. (4) Patients with flashbacks connected to psychotic or psychotic-like symptoms were included in the study. | 27.1% AH |
| 10 | Crompton et al ( | N = 61 | 0% | Israeli male veterans from the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Ex-prisoners of war (POW) (mean age 53 years) with PTSD (n = 61) were compared with ex-POW's without PTSD (n = 36) and veteran controls (no POW status) without PTSD (n = 96) | Trauma related to being POW, e.g., solitary confinement, torture (sexual and physical abuse; deprivation of food, water, and medical treatment), verbal and psychological abuse. Captivity ranged from 1.5 to 8 months. | Veterans in Israel contacted by telephone and asked to take part in a longitudinal study ( | PTSD-I | SCL-90-R | SCL-90-R Q16: “In the past week, how much were you bothered by hearing words that others could not hear?”( | 9.8% AH at time 1 (18 years post-war); |
| 11 | Clifford et al ( | N = 40 | Not specified | Adult survivors of physical and sexual trauma with chronic PTSD (n = 40, mean age 34.4 years) were compared with healthy control participants (n = 39, mean age 29.0 years) with no history of psychiatric disorders | Physical and sexual abuse. | Sexual assault referral center in Paddington, London, UK (n = 15) or from a database of approximately 2,000 community volunteers recruited via local newspaper advertisements, maintained by the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Science research group at the University of Cambridge, UK (n = 25). | SCID for DSM-IV | “Auditory pseudo-hallucinations interview” used in Study 2 by Brewin and Patel ( | Individuals were first asked about the presence of repetitive thoughts, and if so whether the individual experienced this as a voice vs. a stream of thoughts | 5.0% “auditory pseudo-hallucinations” |
Studies of voice hearing in Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) and Other Dissociative Disorders.
| Study | Size of Dx Sample | Female | Sample | Trauma history | Study Setting | Diagnostic | Voice Hearing Measure | Operational Definition/Description of Voice Hearing | Voice Hearing Rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bliss ( | N = 11 | 100% | Patients with multiple personalities (mean age 30 years) who were identified by relatives or friends | Little to no details on trauma history (one patient may have been raped) | 14 individuals with multiple personalities that the author—a physician in an academic psychiatry department in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA—encountered and studied in the previous year. | “All had personalities who revealed themselves and their missions under hypnosis.” | 713-item self-report questionnaire developed by the author (completed by only 11 of the 14 total patients) | Not specified | 64% “schizophrenia” voices |
| 2 | Bliss ( | N = 70 | 68.6% | Adult patients with multiple personalities (mean age not specified) | Sexual and physical abuse “when young” (60% of female and 27% of male patients reported early sexual abuse; 40% of female and 32% of male patients reported early physical abuse). | Research setting unspecified; however, author with affiliation with an academic psychiatry department in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. | DSM-III criteria for MPD (n=20 females, n=12 males), or determined under hypnosis to have “possible multiples” even if DSM-III criteria not fully met (n=28 females, 10 males). NB: As there were no significant clinical differences observed between the DSM-III and possible multiples patients, the two groups were combined for analysis. | 327-item self-report questionnaire developed by the author (consisting of items from the Research Diagnostic Criteria, the MMPI, the literature, and other sources) | Not specified | 51.4% AH |
| 3 | Putnam et al ( | N = 100 | 92% | Outpatients (mean age 35.8 years) identified by their treating clinician to have a diagnosis of MPD | Childhood trauma: sexual abuse (83%), physical abuse (75%), extreme neglect (60%), witness to violent death (~42%), extreme poverty (20%), and “other abuses” (~37%). | Questionnaires distributed to ~400 clinicians across North America who previously indicated an interest in MPD. Each clinician was asked to report on a single patient, currently or recently in treatment with that clinician, who met DSM-III criteria for MPD. Return rate was 40%. 100 cases were selected based on the number of questions completed (submitted by 92 clinicians, including 49 psychiatrists, 37 PhD clinical psychologists, and 6 MSW psychiatric social workers). | DSM-III criteria for MPD (criteria were specified on the cover page of the questionnaire, but “the interpretation of these criteria was left to the reporting clinician, since no independent confirmation was possible.”) | 386-item questionnaire developed by the authors, including a 73-item checklist of signs and symptoms observed by the clinician or reported by the patient during clinician's initial contacts with the patient | Not specified | 30% AH |
| 4 | Coons and Milstein ( | N = 20 | 85% | 20 patients with MPD (mean age 29 years) diagnosed by the first author, compared with 20 age and sex-matched inpatients with primarily affective and characterologic disturbances and without schizophrenia or dissociative disorders | Childhood sexual (75%) and physical abuse (55%). Childhood abuse and/or rape confirmed by at least one family member or emergency room report in 17 patients (85%) | Patients with MPD receiving treatment at an academically affiliated psychiatric hospital in Indianapolis, IN, USA (n = 10 outpatient, n = 9 inpatient, n = 1 from the consultation-liaison service) who were seen by the first author during an 11-year period. | DSM-III criteria for MPD | Psychiatric interview (unstructured) and MMPI | Not specified | 60% AH |
| 5 | Kluft ( | N = 30 | 70% | Patients with MPD (mean age not specified) who were determined to have achieved and maintained (for 27 months or more) fusion of personalities. Of 241 MPD interviewed patients, 135 were excluded for not having achieved fusion of personalities, 54 for not maintaining fusion 27 months or more, 11 for “relapse phenomena,” 4 for requiring psychiatric medications, and 7 for other reasons, leaving 30 patients in the study group. | Not specified | Referrals to the author—a physician affiliated with a psychiatric hospital in Philadelphia, PA, USA—for consideration or confirmation of the diagnosis of MPD. | DSM-III criteria for MPD | Data from the author's first interview with each patient | Author conducted interviews using Mellor’s first rank symptom definitions( | 46.7% first-rank AH |
| 6 | Coons et al ( | N = 50 | 92% | The first 50 patients with MPD (mean age 29 years) who were consecutively evaluated by the first author as part of a longitudinal 10-year follow-up study of patients with dissociative disorders | Childhood—sexual abuse (68%), physical abuse (60%), neglect (22%), abandonment (20%), emotional abuse (10%), witness to accidental death (4%). Adult trauma also occurred after diagnosis of MPD: rape (24%), domestic violence (10%). | Longitudinal study of MPD based in an academically affiliated psychiatric hospital in Indianapolis, IN, USA (n = 40 inpatients; n = 10 outpatients). | DSM-III criteria for MPD, and MMPI. | Modified 406-item version of the Putnam etal ( | Which measure was used to estimate VH prevalence not specified | 72% AH |
| 7 | Ross et al ( | N = 236 | 87.7% | Patients with MPD (mean age 30.1 years) reported on by clinicians throughout North America via a mail-in questionnaire | Childhood sexual abuse (79.2%), childhood physical abuse (74.9%). 53.6% of the male and 67.1% of the female patients had experienced both childhood sexual and physical abuse. 63.9% of the male and 66.6% of the female patients had been raped. | Questionnaire about MPD mailed to 1,729 members of the Canadian Psychiatric Association and to 515 members of the International Society for the Study of Multiple Personality and Dissociation. Each respondent was asked to complete the questionnaire on a recent case of MPD the respondent had seen, or to indicate that the respondent had not made a diagnosis of MPD. The 236 MPD cases were reported by 203 clinicians throughout North America (including psychiatrists, non-psychiatric MD’s, psychologists, social workers, nurses, occupational therapists, and “other”) | 36-item questionnaire on MPD, which inquired how well the patients met DSM-III-R and NIMH† diagnostic criteria for MPD | 36-item questionnaire on MPD, which inquired about the number of Schneiderian first rank symptoms of schizophrenia experienced by the patient, among other questions | Schneiderian first rank VH (actual item(s) not specified or provided) | 71.7% voices arguing, |
| 8 | Ross et al ( | N = 102 | 90.2% | Patients with clinical diagnoses of MPD (mean age 31.8 years) | Childhood sexual (90.2%) and physical abuse (82.4%). Altogether, 95.1% of patients had experienced one or both forms of childhood trauma. | Four medical centers in North America: Winnipeg (n = 50; patients presenting for initial assessment), Utah (n = 20; patients participating as subjects for a PhD thesis), California (n = 17; patients presenting for initial assessment), and Ottawa (n = 15; patients drawn from an existing caseload, primarily therapy outpatients). No differences between centers on demographics or mean number of Schneiderian symptoms endorsed. | Clinical interview and DDIS (131-item structured interview that takes 30–45min to administer; sensitivity 90% and specificity 100% for MPD diagnosis( | DDIS section on secondary features of MPD | DDIS Q96: “Do you hear voices talking to you sometimes or talking inside your head?” | 87.3% voices talking (Q96) |
| 9 | Loewenstein and Putnam ( | N = 21 | 0% | 21 male patients with MPD (mean age 38.6 years) were compared with data on 92 female patients previously collected for a different study on MPD (which used questionnaires mailed to outpatient clinicians across North America)( | Childhood—sexual abuse (85%), physical abuse (~95%), neglect (~66%), extreme poverty (~34% male), witness to violence (~40% male), other trauma (93% male, 85% female), i.e. confinement, emotional abuse, etc. | Referrals for dissociative disorder consultation to the two authors. Most patients came from the clinical services of a Veterans Affairs Medical Center in West Los Angeles, CA (patients of RJL), or from a federally operated psychiatric hospital in Washington, DC (patients of FWP), USA, although it is noted that several patients also came from other private and public settings. | DSM-III/DSM-III-R and NIMH† research criteria for MPD | 386-item NIMH questionnaire (clinician-rated) describing characteristics of the patients( | Not specified | 75% AH |
| 10 | Dell and Eisenhower ( | N = 11 | 64% | Adolescents with MPD (mean age 14.7 years) followed in therapy by the first author | Childhood – sexual abuse (73%), physical abuse (73%), emotional abuse (82%), medical/surgical trauma (9%), injury (9%). Mean number of different types of trauma (i.e. sexual, physical, and emotional abuse, injury, medical/surgical trauma) reported was 2.4 (range, 1 to 4). Trauma and abuse was confirmed in 73% of the cases. | Referrals for diagnostic evaluation and/or therapy to the first author, a clinical psychologist affiliated with an academic medical center in Norfolk, VA, USA, over a 4-year period | DSM-III-R criteria plus NIMH† research criteria for MPD | Clinical interviews involving patients and their families | Not specified | 81.8% “AH (voices heard within the head)” |
| 11 | Hornstein and Putnam ( | N = 64 | 65.6% | Children and adolescents with dissociative disorders (n = 44 MPD, mean age 11.1 years; n = 20 DDNOS, mean age 8.4 years) | Childhood – sexual abuse (about 57% DDNOS, 80% MPD), physical abuse (about 64% DDNOS, 69% MPD), both sexual and physical abuse (about 50% DDNOS, 61% MPD), witnessed violence (about 80% DDNOS, 70% MPD), neglect (ab0ut 63% DDNOS, 80% MPD), abandonment (about 50% DDNOS, 46%MPD), witnessed parental death (about 12% DDNOS, 4% MPD). | First series, collected by the first author, consisted of patients (n = 22 MPD, n=8 DDNOS) seen for evaluation and treatment in an inpatient unit (except four outpatients) at UCLA in Los Angeles, CA, USA. Second series, collected by the second author, consisted of mostly outpatients (n = 22 MPD, n = 12 DDNOS) who participated in a longitudinal research project on the psychobiological effects of sexual abuse at the NIMH or who received consultation or treatment at a children's hospital in Washington, DC, USA. Data from the two series were pooled, as there were no statistically significant between-site differences for the MPD cases or the DDNOS cases (except higher rate of learning disabilities in DDNOS cases in the second series). | DSM-III-R criteria augmented by NIMH† criteria for MPD. | Database developed by the authors to standardize data collection between the two sites. The database consisted of more than 100 symptoms and behaviors grouped into 16 factors, one of which was hallucinations. | Not specified | AH in: |
| 12 | Boon and Draijer ( | N = 71 | 95.8% | Patients with MPD (mean age 33.1 years) referred from across The Netherlands; 48 referred with diagnosis of MPD prior to the study, 23 referred for evaluation because a dissociative disorder suspected by the referring clinician. | Childhood and adult trauma. History of childhood sexual or physical abuse reported by 94.4% of patients. Specifically, 77.5% of patients experienced childhood sexual abuse and 80.3% experienced physical abuse. 42.3% of patients also reported sexual and physical abuse in adulthood (individual rates not specified) | Patients referred by 60 clinicians from across The Netherlands (76% outpatients, 14.1% inpatients, 9.9% psychiatric day hospital) | Dutch version of the SCID-D (for DSM-III-R MPD) | SCID-D for DSM-III-R MPD section on associated features, Dutch version | Not specified | 94.2% voices commenting, 90.1% voices talking or arguing. |
| 13 | Sar et al ( | N = 35 | 88.6% | Turkish patients with clinical diagnoses of DID (mean age 22.8 years) | Childhood trauma: physical abuse (62.9%), sexual abuse (57.1%), neglect (62.9%), emotional abuse (57.1%). 77.1% of the patients experienced one or both physical and sexual abuse. 88.6% of patients experienced at least one type of childhood trauma listed above. | Medical center (including in- and outpatient psychiatric services) at the University of Istanbul, Turkey | DSM-IV criteria for DID, and n=29 (82.9%) met criteria for MPD on the Turkish version of the DDIS (sensitivity 95% and specificity 98.3%) | Turkish versions of DDIS and DES | DDIS Q96: “Do you hear voices talking to you sometimes or talking inside your head?” | 94.3% “voices talking” |
| 14 | Coons ( | N = 25 | 84% | Children (n = 4 DDNOS) and adolescents (n = 11 MPD, n = 9 DDNOS, n = 1 psychogenic amnesia) with DSM-III-R dissociative disorders who were consecutively referred for diagnostic evaluation (mean age of the 4 children was 8.5 years, range 5–12 years; mean age of the 21 adolescents was 15.8 years, range 13–17 years) | Childhood sexual (76%) and physical abuse (68%). Child abuse confirmed in 8 of the 9 cases of MPD and in 12 cases of DDNOS. | Referrals (n = 10 outpatient, n = 11 inpatient) for diagnostic evaluation by a specialized dissociative disorders clinic at a psychiatric hospital in Indianapolis, IN, USA between 1984-1993 | DSM-III-R criteria for MPD. | Adolescents: DES and MMPI (in inpatients) | Exactly how VH was defined or measured not specified | “Inner voices” reported by: |
| 15 | Middleton and Butler ( | N = 62 | 87% | Patients with DID (mean age 31.6 years) | Childhood/adolescent sexual abuse (87%), physical abuse (85%), emotional abuse (79%). Confirmation of significant past trauma was obtained for 29% of patients via actual admissions from principal abusers, other family members, photographic evidence, and medical or police records. | Patients seen over a 5-year period (1992–1997) by either of the two authors, who were affiliated with a university and a private psychiatric hospital in Queensland, Australia. Assessments were not part of a formal research project. The clinical settings were diverse (i.e., acute hospital admissions, inpatient or outpatient referrals, medical ward consultations, civil and criminal medicolegal evaluations, etc.). | DSM-IV criteria for DID, DDIS, and DES | DDIS, DES, and clinical interviews | Exactly how VH was defined or measured not specified | 98% “auditory hallucinations or pseudo-hallucinations.” |
| 16 | Dell ( | N = 220 | 90% | Patients clinically diagnosed with DID (mean age 41 years) and undergoing active psychotherapy | Not specified | Outpatient settings (n = 161) throughout the USA and Canada; inpatient facilities (n = 57) in the USA (California, Texas, Massachusetts), Canada, and Australia; clinical setting of n = 2 unknown. | Clinically diagnosed by therapist to have DSM-IV DID. Diagnosis confirmed with SCID-D-R in a subset (n = 41). | 259-item precursor of the final version of the MID (with 218 items) | See | 95% voices commenting, 89% voices arguing |
AH, auditory hallucinations; BPRS, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (73); CAPS, Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (74); CDC, Child Dissociation Checklist (75); DDIS, Dissociative Disorders Interview Schedule (70, 71); DDNOS, Dissociative disorder not otherwise specified; DES, Dissociative Experiences Scale (63); DES-II, Dissociative Experiences Scale, version II (67); DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders [e.g., DSM-III (76), DSM-IV (77)]; K-SADS, Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School Aged Children (62); MID, Multidimensional Inventory of Dissociation (78); MMPI, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (79); MPD, Multiple Personality Disorder; M-PTSD, Mississippi Scale for Combat-Related Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (80); PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (64); PDS, Posttraumatic Stress Diagnostic Scale (81); PSS, Posttraumatic Stress Scale (82); PTSD-I, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Inventory (83); RDC, Research Diagnostic Criteria (84); SAPS, Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms (85); SADS-C, Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia, Change Version (86); SCID, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM [SCID for DSM-III-R (87), SCID for DSM-IV (88)]; SCID-D, Structured Clinical interview for DSM-III-R Dissociative Disorders (89); SCID-D-R, Structured Clinical interview for DSM-IV Dissociative Disorders-Revised (90); SCL-90-R, Symptom Checklist 90, Revised (66); VH, voice hearing.
†The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) research criteria for MPD specified that, in addition to DSM-III or DSM-III-R criteria for MPD being satisfied, two or more alter personalities had to exhibit distinct alter personality-specific behavior on at least three separate occasions, and that psychogenic amnesia was reported or observed(34).
Voice hearing items in the Multidimensional Inventory of Dissociation (MID).
| Item | Multidimensional Inventory | MID Voice Hearing | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCH | PER | CHI | INT | POS | ||
| Q6 | “Hearing the voice of a child in your head.” | X | ||||
| Q30 | “Hearing voices in your head that argue or converse with one another.” | X | ||||
| Q42 | “Hearing a voice in your head that tries to tell you what to do.” | X | X | |||
| Q84 | “Hearing a voice in your head that wants you to hurt yourself.” | X | ||||
| Q97 | “Hearing a lot of noise or yelling in your head.” | X | X | |||
| Q98 | “Hearing voices, which come from unusual places (for example, the air conditioner, the computer, the walls, etc.), that try to tell you what to do.” | |||||
| Q118 | “Hearing voices crying in your head.” | X | ||||
| Q140 | “Hearing a voice in your head that calls you names (for example, wimp, stupid, whore, slut, bitch, etc.)” | X | X | |||
| Q159 | “Hearing a voice in your head that wants you to die.” | X | ||||
| Q171 | “Hearing a voice in your head that calls you a liar or tells you that certain events never happened.” | X | X | |||
| Q199 | “Hearing a voice in your head that tells you to ‘shut up'.” | X | X | |||
| Q207 | “Hearing a voice in your head that calls you no good, worthless, or a failure.” | X | X | |||
| Q216 | “Hearing a voice in your head that is soothing, helpful, or protective.” | X | ||||
SCH, Schneiderian voices; PER, Persecutory voices; CHI, Child voices; INT, Voices of internal struggle; POS, Positive voices.
Figure 1Breakdown of participants.
Participant characteristics.
| All Patients | Unequivocal VH | Ambiguous VH | Unequivocal non-VH | Statistic | Significance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||
|
| χ2 = 8.860 |
| |||||
| PTSD without dissociation, No. (%) | 16 (22.9%) | 4 (12.5%) | 8 (25.0%) | 4 (66.7%) |
|
| |
| PTSD Dissociative Subtype, No. (%) | 17 (24.3%) | 8 (25.0%) | 8 (25.0%) | 1 (16.7%) | χ2 = 0.207 |
| |
| PTSD + Major Dissociative Disorders | 37 (52.9%) | 20 (62.5%) | 16 (50.0%) | 1 (16.7%) | χ2 = 4.453 |
| |
| PTSD + DDNOS, No. (%) | 3 (4.3%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (9.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | – | – | |
| PTSD + DID, No. (%) | 34 (48.6%) | 20 (62.5%) | 13 (40.6%) | 1 (16.7%) | – | – | |
|
| |||||||
| Current Major Depressive Disorder | 5 (7.1%) | 3 (9.4%) | 1 (3.1%) | 1 (16.7%) | χ2 = 1.840 |
| |
| Borderline Personality Disorder | 15 (21.4%) | 6 (18.8%) | 7 (21.9%) | 2 (33.3%) | χ2 = 0.645 |
| |
|
| 31 (18–62) | 31.5 (18–61) | 30 (18–60) | 32 (21–62) | χ2 = 0.665 |
| |
|
| 118.3 ± 8.6 | 118.0 ± 8.4 | 119.0 ± 8.7 | 116.7 ± 9.9 |
|
| |
|
| 35 (51.5%) | 16 (51.6%) | 16 (51.6%) | 3 (50.0%) | χ2 = 0.006 |
| |
|
| 79 (38–119)* | 86 (27–119)* | 75 (38–113) | 62.5 (52–79) | χ2 = 3.875 |
| |
| Emotional Abuse | 18 (6–25) | 18 (5–25) | 18 (8–25) | 17 (11–19) | χ2 = 1.568 |
| |
| Physical Abuse | 10 (5–25) | 12 (5–23) | 10 (5–25) | 8 (5–19) | χ2 = 1.184 |
| |
| Sexual Abuse | 21 (5–25)* | 21 (5–25)*, † | 17 (5–25) | 10 (5–22)† |
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| Emotional Neglect | 18 (5–25) | 19 (7–25) | 17 (5–25) | 14.5 (7–24) | χ2 = 1.034 |
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| Physical Neglect | 12 (5–21) | 12 (5–21) | 12 (5–21) | 10 (6–13) | χ2 = 1.002 |
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| 89.3 ± 41.3 | 99.6 ± 43.8† | 85.2 ± 38.0 | 56.0 ± 24.2† |
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| 52.3 ± 13.6 | 50.0 ± 16.1 | 55.2 ± 9.1 | 49.0 ± 18.4 |
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| 29.0 ± 10.8 | 32.7 ± 11.5 | 27.9 ± 10.9 | 25.8 ± 6.8 |
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| Antipsychotics, No. (%) | 30 (47.6%) | 14 (43.8%) | 11 (34.4%) | 5 (83.3%) | χ2 = 3.853 |
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| Antidepressants, No. (%) | 46 (73.0%) | 19 (59.4%) | 21 (65.6%) | 6 (100.0%) | χ2 = 3.101 |
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| Mood Stabilizers, No. (%) | 25 (39.7%) | 12 (37.5%) | 10 (31.3%) | 3 (50.0%) | χ2 = 0.486 |
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| Sedative-Hypnotics, No. (%) | 33 (52.4%) | 15 (46.9%) | 15 (46.9%) | 3 (50.0%) | χ2 = 0.035 |
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| χ2 = 8.344 |
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| White, No. (%) | 61 (87.1%) | 30 (93.8%) | 25 (78.1%) | 6 (100%) | – | – | |
| Black, No. (%) | 3 (4.3%) | 1 (3.1%) | 2 (6.3%) | 0 (0%) | – | – | |
| Asian, No. (%) | 4 (5.7%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (12.5%) | 0 (0%) | – | – | |
| American Indian, No. (%) | 1 (1.4%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (3.1%) | 0 (0%) | – | - | |
| Other, No. (%) | 1 (1.4%) | 1 (3.1%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | – | – | |
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| χ2 = 3.591 |
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| Hispanic, No. (%) | 2 (2.9%) | 0 (0%) | 2 (6.2%) | 0 (0%) | – | – | |
| Non-Hispanic, No. (%) | 67 (95.7%) | 31 (96.9%) | 30 (93.8%) | 6 (100%) | – | – | |
| Prefer not to answer, No. (%) | 1 (1.4%) | 1 (3.1%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | – | – |
1Age and CTQ scores were not normally distributed, thus the Kruskal-Wallis test was conducted. 2Eight participants are missing WASI IQ scores (4 unequivocal VH+; 4 ambiguous VH+). 3At least one parent with a 4-year college degree; two participants are missing information on parental education level (1 unequivocal VH+; 1 ambiguous VH+). 4Two participants are missing CTQ scores (1 unequivocal VH+; 1 ambiguous VH+). 5Seven participants are missing information on medication (3 unequivocal VH+; 4 ambiguous VH+). *One participant declined to answer questions from the Sexual Abuse subscale of the CTQ. The statistical tests, including the mean and standard deviation, of the Sexual Abuse subscale and the total CTQ score are reflective of this. †No significant difference was detected between unequivocal VH+ and ambiguous VH+ groups in the post hoc test.
Statistics in which at least one of the three groups is significantly different (p < 0.05) are shown in bold.
Figure 2The rate of voice hearing in PTSD as assessed by two different measures.
Figure 3Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curves. (A) The MID voice hearing dissociation score reflects the total number of pathological VH items in the MID experienced by each individual (possible range 0-12). (B) MID voice hearing frequency is the sum of severity scores of individual items across the full range of the Likert scale (possible range 0-112). While B16 and MID VH scores have greater than chance agreement, the strength of agreement is only moderate, suggesting that B16 and MID VH items measure related, but not identical, constructs.
Figure 4Scores for pathological voice hearing. Compared to the ambiguous VH group, the unequivocal VH group showed higher MID VH dissociation scores for Schneiderian voices (A), persecutory voices (B), and child voices (C). †Only the between-group difference in child voices (C) survived multiple comparisons correction.
Figure 5Mean frequency of pathological voice hearing. Compared to the ambiguous VH group, the unequivocal VH group showed higher mean MID VH frequency scores for Schneiderian voices (A), persecutory voices (B), and child voices (C). †The between-group differences in Schneiderian voices (A) and child voices (C) survived multiple comparisons correction.