1. Acute psychopathology as a predictor of global functioning in patients with ICD-10 non-affective psychosis: A prospective study in 11 European countries
- Author
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Alexander Nawka, Ana M. Salazar-Montes, Lars Kjellin, Georgi Onchev, Anastasia Karastergiou, Andrzej Kiejna, Stefan Priebe, Andrea Fiorillo, Thomas W. Kallert, Jiří Raboch, Eleni Petkari, Jorge A. Cervilla, Francisco Torres-González, Algirdas Dembinskas, Petkari, E, SALAZAR MONTES, Am, Kallert, Tw, Priebe, S, Fiorillo, Andrea, Raboch, J, Onchev, G, Karastergiou, A, Nawka, A, Dembinskas, A, Kiejna, A, Kjellin, L, TORRES GONZALEZ, F, and Cervilla, Ja
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Psychosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Schizoaffective disorder ,Young Adult ,International Classification of Diseases ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Psychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Retrospective Studies ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Principal Component Analysis ,Psychopathology ,ICD-10 ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Patient Discharge ,Europe ,Hospitalization ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Cohort ,Female ,Psychology ,Cohort study ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This prospective analysis aimed to study the influence of psychopathological dimensions on the global functioning of persons suffering from psychotic disorders, taking into account the role of a broad range of potential confounders. A large international cohort (n = 1888) with ICD-10 non-affective psychosis was evaluated both at baseline during a hospital admission and three months after discharge. Trained interviewers administered a global functioning scale (GAF) and a psychopathological scale (BPRS) at baseline and follow-up). Baseline BPRS psychopathological dimensions were extracted using Principal Component Analysis. Results of multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that affective symptoms (depressive or manic) prospectively predict a better global functioning, whilst agitation/cognitive symptoms determined poorer global functioning. Other predictors showing an independent effect on better global functioning were medication compliance, country of residence, female gender, married or coupled status, younger age and having a diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder rather than schizophrenia or other ICD-10 psychosis. A predicting model for global functioning in patients with psychosis is provided, showing that assessment of affective and agitation/cognitive symptoms should be emphasised during admission as they can be more informative than positive/negative symptoms in prospectively planning follow-up care that is geared towards a better functional recovery.
- Published
- 2011
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