Objective
This
review explores the influence of anxiety and depression on the
experience of positive psychotic symptoms, and investigates the
possibility of a causal role for anxiety and depression in the emergence
and persistence of psychosis.
Method
A
systematic literature search was undertaken, producing a number of
papers which comment on the links between anxiety and depression, and
the experience of delusions and hallucinations. In addition, evidence
which could contribute to our understanding of the causal role of
anxiety and depression was highlighted.
Results
The
findings show that both anxiety and depression are associated in
meaningful ways with the severity of delusions and hallucinations, the
distress they elicit and their content. However, the cross-sectional
nature of the majority of studies and the focus on certain symptom
subtypes tempers the validity of the findings. Data from non-clinical
samples, studies which track the longitudinal course of psychosis and
those which examine the impact of anxiety and depression on the
prognosis for people experiencing psychosis, offer some support for the
possibility of an influential role for anxiety and depression.
Conclusion
We
conclude that anxiety and depression are related to psychotic symptom
severity, distress and content and are also linked with sub-clinical
experiences, symptom development, prognosis and relapse. These links may
imply that anxiety and depression could be targets for therapeutic
intervention. The article concludes with suggestions for further
research, highlighting avenues which may circumvent the limitations of
the body of work as it stands.
Source: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acps.12080/abstract
Source: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acps.12080/abstract
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