
Psychiatric News April 1, 2005
Volume 40 Number 7
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
p. 39
Could Schizophrenia Confer Edge in Reality Testing?
Joan Arehart-Treichel
Patients with schizophrenia may assess their chances of encountering
adversity more realistically than "healthy" individuals screened
for personal and family medical and psychiatric histories.
Risk taking is a big part of life for everyone, but especially for persons
with schizophrenia because of cognitive deficits, frequent lack of insight,
and paranoid and delusional symptoms.
Thus the question arises: How well do persons with schizophrenia assess the
chances of misfortune befalling them? Not only as well as healthy individuals,
but even better, a new study surprisingly suggests.
The study was conducted by Kristen Prentice, Ph.D., an instructor in
psychiatry at the University of Maryland; James Gold, Ph.D., a professor of
psychiatry at Maryland; and William Carpenter Jr., M.D., a professor of
psychiatry at the university and director of the Maryland Psychiatric Research
Center.
The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and the
National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression, and its
findings appear in the March American Journal of Psychiatry.
Twenty-five individuals with schizophrenia and 23 healthy comparison
subjects similar in age, gender, and ethnicity participated in the study. The
schizophrenia subjects had been stabilized with antipsychotic medications for
at least four weeks before the study started.
Each subject was asked to complete a questionnaire that has been widely
used in risk-perception research. The questionnaire asked respondents to
estimate how vulnerable they believed themselves to be, compared with other
adults of the same age and gender, to 40 different adverse events.
The events were categorized as controllable, uncontrollable, and neutral.
For example, "being injured in a car from not wearing a seatbelt"
or "getting lung cancer" were placed under the "controllable
event" rubric. "Getting a cold" or "experiencing an
earthquake" were placed under the "uncontrollable event"
heading. "Developing asbestos poisoning" or "suffering a
fatal fall" were grouped under "neutral events."
The healthy comparison subjects believed they were less likely than other
adults of their age and gender to be susceptible to the unfavorable events
listed on the questionnaireespecially the controllable ones. The
schizophrenia subjects did too, but not to the same extent as the healthy
subjects.
The question then was how to interpret these findings. First, many studies,
not just this one, have found that people generally believe that they are
unlikely to experience unfortunate events, especially unfortunate events over
which they have control. So this optimistic outlook seems to be widespread. In
contrast, there is also reason to believe that such a rose-colored view may
not be realistic.
In other words, while it is difficult to judge whether such buoyancy is
actually warranted on a person-by-person basis, scientists can definitely
pronounce it unjustified when it is observed in a group of people, Prentice
explained in an interview.
For example, she said, "If I pick a random sample of people and ask
them how likely they are, relative to everyone else or to other people like
themselves, to have a particular unpleasant experience, a purely unbiased and
statistically reasonable answer would be `equally likely.' But when most of
the people in my random sample say `less likely,' the math just can't work,
and we know that the group shares an unrealistic optimism."
Thus, if one accepts that individuals usually display an unrealistic
optimism about their vulnerability to adversity, one can conclude that persons
with schizophrenia stabilized on antipsychotic medications view their
susceptibility to adversity somewhat more realistically than people generally
do.
"It is always a pleasant surprise," said Prentice, "when
the data suggest that schizophrenia patients have a potential advantage over
healthy adults. We seldom see that in our research."
Prentice and her colleagues are now gearing up for a related study of
schizophrenia patients' decision making with special emphasis on risk-taking
and risk-avoidance behaviors. "Since we have a major interest in how
patients make decisions about clinical-research participation," she
said, "we will also look at how risk attitudes might influence those
decisions."
The study, "Optimistic Bias in the Perception of Personal
Risk: Patterns in Schizophrenia," is posted online at
<http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/162/3/507>.
Am J Psychiatry 2005 162 507[Abstract/Free Full Text]
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