BJPsych Open (Sep 2019)

The weeks before 100 persecutory delusions: the presence of many potential contributory causal factors

  • Daniel Freeman,
  • Anthony Morrison,
  • Jessica C. Bird,
  • Eleanor Chadwick,
  • Emily Bold,
  • Kathryn M. Taylor,
  • Rowan Diamond,
  • Nicola Collett,
  • Emma Černis,
  • Louise Isham,
  • Rachel Lister,
  • Miriam Kirkham,
  • Ashley-Louise Teale,
  • Eve Twivy,
  • Felicity Waite

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2019.67
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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BackgroundThe period before the formation of a persecutory delusion may provide causal insights. Patient accounts are invaluable in informing this understanding.AimsTo inform the understanding of delusion formation, we asked patients about the occurrence of potential causal factors – identified from a cognitive model – before delusion onset.MethodA total of 100 patients with persecutory delusions completed a checklist about their subjective experiences in the weeks before belief onset. The checklist included items concerning worry, images, low self-esteem, poor sleep, mood dysregulation, dissociation, manic-type symptoms, aberrant salience, hallucinations, substance use and stressors. Time to reach certainty in the delusion was also assessed.ResultsMost commonly it took patients several months to reach delusion certainty (n = 30), although other patients took a few weeks (n = 24), years (n = 21), knew instantly (n = 17) or took a few days (n = 6). The most frequent experiences occurring before delusion onset were: low self-confidence (n = 84); excessive worry (n = 80); not feeling like normal self (n = 77); difficulties concentrating (n = 77); going over problems again and again (n = 75); being very negative about the self (n = 75); images of bad things happening (n = 75); and sleep problems (n = 75). The average number of experiences occurring was high (mean 23.5, s.d. = 8.7). The experiences clustered into six main types, with patients reporting an average of 5.4 (s.d. = 1.0) different types.ConclusionsPatients report numerous different experiences in the period before full persecutory delusion onset that could be contributory causal factors, consistent with a complex multifactorial view of delusion occurrence. This study, however, relied on retrospective self-report and could not determine causality.Declaration of interestNone.

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