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Psychiatric Patients with a Serious Mental Illness and a Recent History of Violent Behavior: An Exploration of Developmental, Clinical, Cognitive, and Demographic Characteristics

Authors :
Feras Nadhim Hasoon Al Attar
Sheena Mathew
Qin-Lai Huang, Lida Wang, Shu-Guang Han
Hua Tang
Siyamol Chirakkarottu
Sisir Nandi
Said Afqir Khalid El Bairi
Mohit Kumar, Mridula Saxena, Anil Kumar Saxena
Tanos C. C. Franca
Mariam Amrani
Yi-Hau Chen
Pravin Shende
Hsiuying Wang
Xijie Yu
Steven M. Silverstein
Bala Prabhakar Pankaj Mandpe
José Daniel Figueroa-Villar, Elaine C. Petronilho, Kamil Kuca
Xiuwen Wang, Xiang Chen, Lingyun Lu
Source :
Current Psychiatry Research and Reviews. 16:110-118
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd., 2020.

Abstract

Background: Epidemiologic studies have shown that persons suffering from psychotic disorders are at increased risk of violent behavior. Several factors have been shown to predict violent behavior among persons with psychosis. However, prior research is limited in that these factors have not been explored simultaneously within the same study. Methods: The current study, therefore, aimed to determine which demographic, clinical, cognitive, and developmental characteristics were associated with an increased likelihood of violence among patients diagnosed with a psychotic disorder and which combination of these best predicted a history of violence. Participants (n=53) completed measures of demographics, violence risk, psychotic and personality symptoms, trauma, psychopathy and cognitive functioning. Results: Bivariate relationships were conducted to compare the history of violent behavior between all variables. Additionally, a binary logistic regression was run predicting participants’ history of violence. Several demographic, cognitive, clinical, and developmental factors were associated with increased odds of having a history of violence. The overall correct classification rate for the model was 92.2%, with 87.5% of participants without a history of violence and 91.4% with a history of violence being correctly classified. The model included antisocial personality traits, poor behavioral controls, head injury, not accepting responsibility, lacking goals, prior supervision failures, and HCR-20 total score. Conclusion: The binary logistic regression model showed good accuracy in predicting a history of violence in persons with psychosis. These findings are consistent with prior research and can inform efforts at risk assessment and identification of treatment targets for people with a psychotic disorder who are at highest risk of violence.

Details

ISSN :
26660822
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Psychiatry Research and Reviews
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c8340ede3d5e3bdd99a6fb43d0b6861c