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How does attachment style affect psychosis? A systematic review of causal mechanisms and guide to future inquiry

How does attachment style affect psychosis? A systematic review of causal mechanisms and guide to future inquiry
How does attachment style affect psychosis? A systematic review of causal mechanisms and guide to future inquiry

Purpose: the link between attachment and psychosis is now well established, but less is known about the causal mechanisms underlying this relationship. This systematic review synthesises the studies that examine mediating mechanisms in the attachment and psychosis relationship, in both clinical and non-clinical samples. 

Method: we conducted a database search (PsychINFO, MEDLINE, Web of Science) to identify all eligible studies irrespective of publication status, the language of article or article date. We assessed methodological quality and completed a narrative synthesis given the heterogeneity of studies to date. 

Results: we identified 17 papers, comprising 3,672 participants. The relationship between attachment and psychosis is mediated by four variables or groups of variables. There is good evidence for the causal role of affective factors (affective dysregulation and affective disturbances) and cognitive factors (e.g., self-beliefs and self-esteem and beliefs about symptoms). Affective factors differed by attachment style. Tentative evidence was found for the role of duration of untreated psychosis and baseline negative symptoms. 

Conclusions: cognitive and affective factors mediate the relationship between attachment style and psychosis. Whilst cognitive factors are routinely targeted in recommended psychological interventions for psychosis, affective factors and attachment style are less commonly considered. Psychological therapies may be improved by calibrating cognitive and affective interventions by attachment style, which should be subjected to experimental and then field studies to assess the impact on clinical and recovery outcomes. 

Practitioner points: the relationship between attachment and psychosis is now well established, and studies have started to examine mediating mechanisms. Affective and cognitive factors mediate the attachment-psychosis relationship. Affective factors differ by attachment style. There is limited evidence for the duration of untreated psychosis and negative psychotic symptoms as mediating mechanisms, and research replication is needed. Cognitive factors are routinely targeted in recommended psychological therapies for psychosis, but affective factors and attachment style are less commonly considered. Research should be conducted into the effectiveness of psychological therapies which calibrate cognitive and affective interventions, according to attachment style.

attachment, mechanisms, mediators, psychosis, review
1476-0835
Partridge, Olivia
e7fd8a4a-4931-4639-ab03-1f05c1dd8b0a
Maguire, Tess
f720bf11-2227-470f-b9bf-b323a59e176c
Newman-Taylor, Katherine
e090b9da-6ede-45d5-8a56-2e86c2dafef7
Partridge, Olivia
e7fd8a4a-4931-4639-ab03-1f05c1dd8b0a
Maguire, Tess
f720bf11-2227-470f-b9bf-b323a59e176c
Newman-Taylor, Katherine
e090b9da-6ede-45d5-8a56-2e86c2dafef7

Partridge, Olivia, Maguire, Tess and Newman-Taylor, Katherine (2021) How does attachment style affect psychosis? A systematic review of causal mechanisms and guide to future inquiry. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 95 (1). (doi:10.1111/papt.12371).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Purpose: the link between attachment and psychosis is now well established, but less is known about the causal mechanisms underlying this relationship. This systematic review synthesises the studies that examine mediating mechanisms in the attachment and psychosis relationship, in both clinical and non-clinical samples. 

Method: we conducted a database search (PsychINFO, MEDLINE, Web of Science) to identify all eligible studies irrespective of publication status, the language of article or article date. We assessed methodological quality and completed a narrative synthesis given the heterogeneity of studies to date. 

Results: we identified 17 papers, comprising 3,672 participants. The relationship between attachment and psychosis is mediated by four variables or groups of variables. There is good evidence for the causal role of affective factors (affective dysregulation and affective disturbances) and cognitive factors (e.g., self-beliefs and self-esteem and beliefs about symptoms). Affective factors differed by attachment style. Tentative evidence was found for the role of duration of untreated psychosis and baseline negative symptoms. 

Conclusions: cognitive and affective factors mediate the relationship between attachment style and psychosis. Whilst cognitive factors are routinely targeted in recommended psychological interventions for psychosis, affective factors and attachment style are less commonly considered. Psychological therapies may be improved by calibrating cognitive and affective interventions by attachment style, which should be subjected to experimental and then field studies to assess the impact on clinical and recovery outcomes. 

Practitioner points: the relationship between attachment and psychosis is now well established, and studies have started to examine mediating mechanisms. Affective and cognitive factors mediate the attachment-psychosis relationship. Affective factors differ by attachment style. There is limited evidence for the duration of untreated psychosis and negative psychotic symptoms as mediating mechanisms, and research replication is needed. Cognitive factors are routinely targeted in recommended psychological therapies for psychosis, but affective factors and attachment style are less commonly considered. Research should be conducted into the effectiveness of psychological therapies which calibrate cognitive and affective interventions, according to attachment style.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 23 October 2021
Published date: 23 October 2021
Keywords: attachment, mechanisms, mediators, psychosis, review

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452520
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452520
ISSN: 1476-0835
PURE UUID: ca573a55-5ade-4d88-bf3d-bfcb2da2728f
ORCID for Katherine Newman-Taylor: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1579-7959

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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 11:26
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 04:03

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Author: Olivia Partridge
Author: Tess Maguire

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