Publication | Closed Access
Replication of Dissociation-Psychosis Link in New Zealand Students and Inmates
53
Citations
33
References
2005
Year
Forensic PsychologyPsychological Co-morbiditiesPsychotherapyPrison InmatesMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesClinical PsychologyPsychotic SymptomsExperimental PsychopathologyNew Zealand StudentsPsychiatryPsychotic ExperiencesClinical PsychiatryForensic PsychiatryPsychotic DisorderSchizophreniaMedicinePsychopathology
To assess the relationship between dissociative and psychotic experiences, New Zealand university students (N = 119) and prison inmates (N = 42) were administered the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES) and Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R). Strong correlations were found between DES scores and the psychoticism and paranoid ideation subscales of the SCL-90-R (students: r = .520, .517, respectively; inmates: r = .637, .649, respectively). While other correlations were also significant (but smaller), these results are consistent with previous studies that have used a range of measures of psychosis or schizotypy with a variety of clinical and nonclinical populations. Such consistent findings in the face of methodological diversity offer strong support for the validity of a link between the concepts of dissociation and psychosis. While this relationship has previously been interpreted indirectly, as dissociative experiences predisposing to psychotic symptoms, we suggest a direct route: that dissociative experiences of various forms may underlie some (or even all) psychotic symptoms.
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