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O3.3. DO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SUICIDAL IDEATION AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN ADOLESCENTS?

BACKGROUND: Youth mental health is a global challenge, with onset of mental illness peaking in adolescence. In this population, depressive symptoms (DS), psychotic experiences (PE) and suicidal ideation (SI) are prevalent and risk factors for future mental disorders. DS could mediate relationships b...

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Autores principales: Campos, Susana, Monjes, Pía, Wigman, Johanna, Nunez, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7234059/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa028.014
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author Campos, Susana
Monjes, Pía
Wigman, Johanna
Nunez, Daniel
author_facet Campos, Susana
Monjes, Pía
Wigman, Johanna
Nunez, Daniel
author_sort Campos, Susana
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Youth mental health is a global challenge, with onset of mental illness peaking in adolescence. In this population, depressive symptoms (DS), psychotic experiences (PE) and suicidal ideation (SI) are prevalent and risk factors for future mental disorders. DS could mediate relationships between psychotic experiences (PE) and suicidal ideation (SI); however, its precise role in this association remains uncertain. We examined whether depressive symptoms mediate the association between psychotic experiences and suicidal ideation using two complementary approaches to cross-sectional data from a community sample of adolescents. We hypothesized that DS mediate relationships between PE and SI. Additionally, we expected to find that specific DS would play a central role in this association and that this would show via higher centrality values for affective symptoms reflecting low energy, hopelessness and self-depreciating feelings in the network analyses. METHODS: We examined cross-sectional relationships between PE, SI and DS in a community sample of adolescents (N= 1715; 13–19 years old) recruited from Chilean secondary schools between April and August 2015. We addressed depressive symptoms (DS) using the Depression and Anxiety Scale (DASS-21). We assessed suicidal ideation using 6 items of the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS), adapted for being used as a self-report questionnaire. We addressed psychotic experiences (PE) by items of two pre-existing scales we adapted in prior studies with adolescents: the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences - Positive scale (CAPE-P15), and the Brief Self-report Questionnaire for Screening Putative Pre-psychotic States (BQSPS). We first conducted a mediation analysis, where PE was the predictor, SI was the outcome, and DS were the mediator variables. Next, we performed a network analysis and estimated the strength centrality index for each symptom, and the network robustness through accuracy and stability test. RESULTS: Pearson’s correlations showed significant associations between all the variables in (SI-DS: r= .491, p<.001; PE-SI: r= .436, p<.001; PE-DS: r= .617, p<.001). No demographic variables (i.e gender, age) had to be controlled for in the mediation. The mediation analysis yielded that depression mediates the relationship between PE and SI (b= .2206, 95% BCa CI [.1783, .2644]). Additionally, network analysis showed the following strength centrality values (SV): depression (mean= 5.92, σ2=1.72; median= 6.08); bizarre experiences (mean= 3.94, σ2=0.35; median= 4.02); perceptual anomalies (mean= 3.75, σ2=2.21; median= 3.75); social anxiety (mean= 3.49, σ2=0.79; median= 3.23); negative symptoms (mean= 3.32, σ2=.23; median= 3.49). SI was strongly connected to pessimism (SV= .69); social anxiety (SV= .41); and self-criticalness/worthlessness (SV= .39). The correlation stability coefficient for the strength was (cor = 0.7) = 0.672, suggesting robustness of the findings. DISCUSSION: Our findings support prior research showing that DS mediate relationship between PE and SI and adds to this literature by showing which symptoms in particular are important. Some specific depressive symptoms having a central role in this process (pessimism and worthlessness) and also psychotic experiences (social anxiety: being distant to people) and perceptual anomalies (seeing things other cannot) are connected in a meaningful way to suicidal ideation in a community sample of adolescents. These findings should be considered when planning early detection/intervention programs.
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spelling pubmed-72340592020-05-23 O3.3. DO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SUICIDAL IDEATION AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN ADOLESCENTS? Campos, Susana Monjes, Pía Wigman, Johanna Nunez, Daniel Schizophr Bull Oral Session: Digital Health/Methods BACKGROUND: Youth mental health is a global challenge, with onset of mental illness peaking in adolescence. In this population, depressive symptoms (DS), psychotic experiences (PE) and suicidal ideation (SI) are prevalent and risk factors for future mental disorders. DS could mediate relationships between psychotic experiences (PE) and suicidal ideation (SI); however, its precise role in this association remains uncertain. We examined whether depressive symptoms mediate the association between psychotic experiences and suicidal ideation using two complementary approaches to cross-sectional data from a community sample of adolescents. We hypothesized that DS mediate relationships between PE and SI. Additionally, we expected to find that specific DS would play a central role in this association and that this would show via higher centrality values for affective symptoms reflecting low energy, hopelessness and self-depreciating feelings in the network analyses. METHODS: We examined cross-sectional relationships between PE, SI and DS in a community sample of adolescents (N= 1715; 13–19 years old) recruited from Chilean secondary schools between April and August 2015. We addressed depressive symptoms (DS) using the Depression and Anxiety Scale (DASS-21). We assessed suicidal ideation using 6 items of the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS), adapted for being used as a self-report questionnaire. We addressed psychotic experiences (PE) by items of two pre-existing scales we adapted in prior studies with adolescents: the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences - Positive scale (CAPE-P15), and the Brief Self-report Questionnaire for Screening Putative Pre-psychotic States (BQSPS). We first conducted a mediation analysis, where PE was the predictor, SI was the outcome, and DS were the mediator variables. Next, we performed a network analysis and estimated the strength centrality index for each symptom, and the network robustness through accuracy and stability test. RESULTS: Pearson’s correlations showed significant associations between all the variables in (SI-DS: r= .491, p<.001; PE-SI: r= .436, p<.001; PE-DS: r= .617, p<.001). No demographic variables (i.e gender, age) had to be controlled for in the mediation. The mediation analysis yielded that depression mediates the relationship between PE and SI (b= .2206, 95% BCa CI [.1783, .2644]). Additionally, network analysis showed the following strength centrality values (SV): depression (mean= 5.92, σ2=1.72; median= 6.08); bizarre experiences (mean= 3.94, σ2=0.35; median= 4.02); perceptual anomalies (mean= 3.75, σ2=2.21; median= 3.75); social anxiety (mean= 3.49, σ2=0.79; median= 3.23); negative symptoms (mean= 3.32, σ2=.23; median= 3.49). SI was strongly connected to pessimism (SV= .69); social anxiety (SV= .41); and self-criticalness/worthlessness (SV= .39). The correlation stability coefficient for the strength was (cor = 0.7) = 0.672, suggesting robustness of the findings. DISCUSSION: Our findings support prior research showing that DS mediate relationship between PE and SI and adds to this literature by showing which symptoms in particular are important. Some specific depressive symptoms having a central role in this process (pessimism and worthlessness) and also psychotic experiences (social anxiety: being distant to people) and perceptual anomalies (seeing things other cannot) are connected in a meaningful way to suicidal ideation in a community sample of adolescents. These findings should be considered when planning early detection/intervention programs. Oxford University Press 2020-05 2020-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7234059/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa028.014 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Oral Session: Digital Health/Methods
Campos, Susana
Monjes, Pía
Wigman, Johanna
Nunez, Daniel
O3.3. DO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SUICIDAL IDEATION AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN ADOLESCENTS?
title O3.3. DO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SUICIDAL IDEATION AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN ADOLESCENTS?
title_full O3.3. DO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SUICIDAL IDEATION AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN ADOLESCENTS?
title_fullStr O3.3. DO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SUICIDAL IDEATION AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN ADOLESCENTS?
title_full_unstemmed O3.3. DO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SUICIDAL IDEATION AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN ADOLESCENTS?
title_short O3.3. DO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SUICIDAL IDEATION AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN ADOLESCENTS?
title_sort o3.3. do depressive symptoms mediate the relationships between suicidal ideation and psychotic experiences in adolescents?
topic Oral Session: Digital Health/Methods
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7234059/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa028.014
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