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Abstract

It is well documented that patients with schizophrenia have impoverished quality of life (QOL). Efforts to determine the underpinnings of this impoverishment have implicated negative symptoms more than positive or disorganized symptoms. However, only a minority of individuals with the liability to schizophrenia will ever show manifest illness, and it is presently unclear the degree to which QOL is affected in individuals with subclinical symptoms of the disorder (ie, schizotypy). The present study examined the relative contributions of negative, positive, and disorganized schizotypy symptoms to QOL.

Measures of schizotypal symptoms and subjective and objective QOL were obtained from a sample of 1395 adults.

Measures of schizotypal symptoms significantly corresponded to all measures of QOL, although the magnitude of correlations were significantly larger for subjective than objective measures. The negative symptom dimension explained a substantial portion of unique variance in the social domains of QOL above and beyond that accounted for by the other schizotypy dimensions.

These findings highlight the deleterious impact of schizotypal symptoms, particularly negative symptoms. Further research clarifying the mechanism underlying this relationship is called for.

Details

Title
Quality of life across the schizotypy spectrum: findings from a large nonclinical adult sample
Author
Cohen, Alex S.; Davis, Thompson E., III
Pages
408-414
Publication year
2009
Publication date
Sep 2009
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
0010440X
e-ISSN
15328384
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1029885999
Copyright
© 2009 Elsevier Inc.