Simon S.Y. Lui , Yuk-Ling Wong , Yi-Hang Huang , Benny C.L. Chau , Ezmond S.L. Cheung , Christy H.Y. Wong , Raisie W.K. Wong , Siu-Kau Leung , Jenny P.H. Lam , Raymond C.K. Chan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The affective pathway to psychosis implicates affective symptoms and neuroticism as mediating steps between childhood trauma and symptoms of schizophrenia. Prior research seldom examined the interplay between childhood trauma, resilience, personality, social functioning and symptoms in schizophrenia patients. This study recruited 290 schizophrenia patients, and constructed a regularized partial correlation network of childhood trauma, resilience, big-five personality traits, symptoms and social functioning. We further applied flow diagram and shortest path analysis to clarify how different childhood trauma types would contribute to and reach different symptoms. In the network, emotional and physical abuse showed the highest expected influence, and resilience showed the highest strength. In flow diagrams, all nodes together contributed two-thirds of variance of social functioning (which had highest predictability). Among childhood trauma types, emotional abuse contributed most to positive symptoms; physical neglect contributed most to negative, depressive and disorganized symptoms. Childhood abuse reached positive symptoms via neuroticism and depressive symptoms, yet it reached negative symptoms via physical neglect and social functioning. Childhood neglect reached positive symptoms via resilience, conscientiousness, neuroticism and depressive symptoms, yet it reached negative symptoms via social functioning. Our findings support that different childhood trauma types contribute to different symptoms, and interacts with resilience, personality and social functioning.
期刊介绍:
The Asian Journal of Psychiatry serves as a comprehensive resource for psychiatrists, mental health clinicians, neurologists, physicians, mental health students, and policymakers. Its goal is to facilitate the exchange of research findings and clinical practices between Asia and the global community. The journal focuses on psychiatric research relevant to Asia, covering preclinical, clinical, service system, and policy development topics. It also highlights the socio-cultural diversity of the region in relation to mental health.