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Intolerance of uncertainty and psychosis: a systematic review

Intolerance of uncertainty and psychosis: a systematic review
Intolerance of uncertainty and psychosis: a systematic review
Objectives: intolerance of uncertainty, the tendency to interpret and react negatively to uncertainty, is a transdiagnostic risk factor for anxiety, depression and eating-related disorders. Given the high comorbidity between anxiety, depression and schizophrenia-spectrum diagnoses (SSDs), there is potential for intolerance of uncertainty to play a role in modulating psychosis symptoms. To address this gap in our understanding, we conducted the first prospectively registered systematic review on intolerance of uncertainty and psychotic symptoms in both people with SSDs and in the general population.

Methods: four databases were searched (PsycINFO, Medline, Web of Science and PubMed), which identified ten studies with a total of 1503 participants that measured intolerance of uncertainty and psychosis symptoms.

Results: key findings suggest the following: (1) Intolerance of uncertainty was associated with total negative psychotic symptoms with small–medium effect sizes; (2) intolerance of uncertainty was higher in individuals with an ‘at-risk’ mental state for psychosis compared to controls; (3) higher intolerance of uncertainty was associated with more individual psychotic symptoms related to delusions and paranoia within clinical and nonclinical samples; and (4) there was mixed evidence for a relationship between intolerance of uncertainty and auditory hallucinations and intolerance of uncertainty and total positive symptoms in clinical samples.

Conclusions: overall, these findings highlight that intolerance of uncertainty may be an important transdiagnostic dimension and potential treatment target for psychotic symptoms such as delusions and paranoia in people with SSDs.
delusions, hallucinations, intolerance of uncertainty, paranoia, psychosis, schizophrenia
0144-6657
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
Butler, Daisy
f75b8de1-98f4-469e-a009-78c4fcf4d280
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
Butler, Daisy
f75b8de1-98f4-469e-a009-78c4fcf4d280
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca

Morriss, Jayne, Butler, Daisy and Ellett, Lyn (2024) Intolerance of uncertainty and psychosis: a systematic review. British Journal of Clinical Psychology. (doi:10.1111/bjc.12509).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: intolerance of uncertainty, the tendency to interpret and react negatively to uncertainty, is a transdiagnostic risk factor for anxiety, depression and eating-related disorders. Given the high comorbidity between anxiety, depression and schizophrenia-spectrum diagnoses (SSDs), there is potential for intolerance of uncertainty to play a role in modulating psychosis symptoms. To address this gap in our understanding, we conducted the first prospectively registered systematic review on intolerance of uncertainty and psychotic symptoms in both people with SSDs and in the general population.

Methods: four databases were searched (PsycINFO, Medline, Web of Science and PubMed), which identified ten studies with a total of 1503 participants that measured intolerance of uncertainty and psychosis symptoms.

Results: key findings suggest the following: (1) Intolerance of uncertainty was associated with total negative psychotic symptoms with small–medium effect sizes; (2) intolerance of uncertainty was higher in individuals with an ‘at-risk’ mental state for psychosis compared to controls; (3) higher intolerance of uncertainty was associated with more individual psychotic symptoms related to delusions and paranoia within clinical and nonclinical samples; and (4) there was mixed evidence for a relationship between intolerance of uncertainty and auditory hallucinations and intolerance of uncertainty and total positive symptoms in clinical samples.

Conclusions: overall, these findings highlight that intolerance of uncertainty may be an important transdiagnostic dimension and potential treatment target for psychotic symptoms such as delusions and paranoia in people with SSDs.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 October 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 October 2024
Keywords: delusions, hallucinations, intolerance of uncertainty, paranoia, psychosis, schizophrenia

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495464
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495464
ISSN: 0144-6657
PURE UUID: 56d49a01-9948-45ba-b15f-ae052d48114d
ORCID for Jayne Morriss: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7928-9673
ORCID for Lyn Ellett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6051-3604

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 14 Nov 2024 17:37
Last modified: 16 Nov 2024 03:05

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Contributors

Author: Jayne Morriss ORCID iD
Author: Daisy Butler
Author: Lyn Ellett ORCID iD

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