Social causes and outcomes of Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder: a review of recent evidence

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Social causes and outcomes of Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder: a review of recent evidence. / Carden, John; Huxley, Peter; Poole, Rob et al.
In: International Journal of Social Psychiatry, Vol. 69, No. 2, 03.2023, p. 412–419.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Carden, J, Huxley, P, Poole, R, Robinson, C, Salmoiraghi, A, Foulkes, J, Davies, S, Williams, S, Morris, N & Meudell, A 2023, 'Social causes and outcomes of Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder: a review of recent evidence', International Journal of Social Psychiatry, vol. 69, no. 2, pp. 412–419. https://doi.org/10.1177/00207640221106681

APA

Carden, J., Huxley, P., Poole, R., Robinson, C., Salmoiraghi, A., Foulkes, J., Davies, S., Williams, S., Morris, N., & Meudell, A. (2023). Social causes and outcomes of Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder: a review of recent evidence. International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 69(2), 412–419. https://doi.org/10.1177/00207640221106681

CBE

Carden J, Huxley P, Poole R, Robinson C, Salmoiraghi A, Foulkes J, Davies S, Williams S, Morris N, Meudell A. 2023. Social causes and outcomes of Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder: a review of recent evidence. International Journal of Social Psychiatry. 69(2):412–419. https://doi.org/10.1177/00207640221106681

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Carden J, Huxley P, Poole R, Robinson C, Salmoiraghi A, Foulkes J et al. Social causes and outcomes of Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder: a review of recent evidence. International Journal of Social Psychiatry. 2023 Mar;69(2):412–419. Epub 2022 Sept 1. doi: 10.1177/00207640221106681

Author

Carden, John ; Huxley, Peter ; Poole, Rob et al. / Social causes and outcomes of Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder: a review of recent evidence. In: International Journal of Social Psychiatry. 2023 ; Vol. 69, No. 2. pp. 412–419.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Social causes and outcomes of Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder: a review of recent evidence

AU - Carden, John

AU - Huxley, Peter

AU - Poole, Rob

AU - Robinson, Catherine

AU - Salmoiraghi, Alberto

AU - Foulkes, Joanne

AU - Davies, Sioned

AU - Williams, Seimon

AU - Morris, Nia

AU - Meudell, Alan

N1 - No embargo upon publication

PY - 2023/3

Y1 - 2023/3

N2 - Background:Reports of increasing presentations of new cases of acute psychosis both locally, nationally and internationally during the COVID-19 pandemic, warranted further investigation. International case reports almost exclusively reported only clinical outcome (e.g. remission of psychotic symptoms), and fail to report on social precipitants or social outcomes. This is a common omission when investigating new psychosis cases such as acute and transient psychotic disorder (ATPD). In order to assess social impacts and outcomes, we conducted a rapid review of recent evidence.Aims:To conduct a rapid review of the recent evidence of social outcomes on new cases of psychosis emerging during the COVID-19 pandemic.Method:Four databases (Medline, Embase, Psychinfo and Cochrane COVID-19) were searched for ATPD, psychosis and social outcomes in adults aged 18+. Duplicates were removed. There were no language limitations. Results: There were 24 papers consisting of 18 original data research papers and 6 reviews. Additionally, 33 papers/letters, reporting on 60 individual cases of psychosis emerging during the COVID-19 pandemic. These two sets of papers were reviewed separately. Many original data research papers and reviews were sub optimal in their quality, with 44% online surveys, with the remainder being routinely collected data.Conclusion:There is a consensus that clinical outcomes of ATPD and other brief psychotic disorders (BPD) are good in the short term. The focus only on symptomatic clinical presentation and outcomes, leaves a gap in our understanding regarding social stressors and longer term social outcomes. ATPD and BPD often may not come to the attention of Early Intervention in Psychosis services, and if they do, are discharged following symptomatic remission. Without an understanding of the social stress factors and social outcomes, opportunities may be missed to prevent increased social disability and future relapse with these presentations.

AB - Background:Reports of increasing presentations of new cases of acute psychosis both locally, nationally and internationally during the COVID-19 pandemic, warranted further investigation. International case reports almost exclusively reported only clinical outcome (e.g. remission of psychotic symptoms), and fail to report on social precipitants or social outcomes. This is a common omission when investigating new psychosis cases such as acute and transient psychotic disorder (ATPD). In order to assess social impacts and outcomes, we conducted a rapid review of recent evidence.Aims:To conduct a rapid review of the recent evidence of social outcomes on new cases of psychosis emerging during the COVID-19 pandemic.Method:Four databases (Medline, Embase, Psychinfo and Cochrane COVID-19) were searched for ATPD, psychosis and social outcomes in adults aged 18+. Duplicates were removed. There were no language limitations. Results: There were 24 papers consisting of 18 original data research papers and 6 reviews. Additionally, 33 papers/letters, reporting on 60 individual cases of psychosis emerging during the COVID-19 pandemic. These two sets of papers were reviewed separately. Many original data research papers and reviews were sub optimal in their quality, with 44% online surveys, with the remainder being routinely collected data.Conclusion:There is a consensus that clinical outcomes of ATPD and other brief psychotic disorders (BPD) are good in the short term. The focus only on symptomatic clinical presentation and outcomes, leaves a gap in our understanding regarding social stressors and longer term social outcomes. ATPD and BPD often may not come to the attention of Early Intervention in Psychosis services, and if they do, are discharged following symptomatic remission. Without an understanding of the social stress factors and social outcomes, opportunities may be missed to prevent increased social disability and future relapse with these presentations.

U2 - 10.1177/00207640221106681

DO - 10.1177/00207640221106681

M3 - Article

VL - 69

SP - 412

EP - 419

JO - International Journal of Social Psychiatry

JF - International Journal of Social Psychiatry

SN - 0020-7640

IS - 2

ER -