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An examination of the contribution of clinical and psychological factors to treatment decision-making capacity in psychosis

Purpose: A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted to identify what factors have been investigated as correlates of the 4 key domains of treatment decision making capacity (TDMC) in people who have experienced psychosis (understanding, reasoning, appreciation, communication) and to provide estimates of the magnitude of these correlations, taking into account study quality. A novel empirical study was conducted to test the hypothesis that variance in psychosis-specific cognitive biases (including the well-established ‘jumping to conclusions’ bias) would account for unique variance in TDMC domains in those with psychosis, after taking into account the known contribution of symptoms and insight. A secondary aim of the empirical study was to examine for the first time the relationship between TDMC and personal recovery in this group, and post hoc analyses of the relationship between cognitive biases, emotional distress and TDMC were also conducted. Methods: Electronic databases were systematically searched for literature on the schizophrenia and psychosis and treatment decision making capacity. Pooled estimates of correlation were estimated for factors with data from three or more studies, and both study and outcome quality were systematically assessed. A cross-sectional observational study was conducted, and individuals with psychosis completed measures of TDMC, cognitive biases, psychotic symptoms and recovery. Multiple regression was used to examine the primary and secondary hypotheses, and mediation analyses were used to conduct the post hoc analyses. Additional data from a parallel study was incorporated to increase power. Results: Twenty-four studies met inclusion criteria for the systematic review and meta-analysis. Low to moderate quality evidence suggested that the ability of people with psychosis to understand treatment-relevant information was strongly associated with overall psychotic symptom severity, verbal cognitive functioning and years of education, but not depression (moderate quality evidence). Low quality evidence suggested reasoning was strongly associated with verbal cognitive functioning and moderately associated with symptoms. Appreciation was associated with symptoms, but it and communication were generally poorly studied. Findings from the empirical study suggest that cognitive biases, and the Jumping to Conclusions bias in particular, predicts a moderate amount of the variance in the understanding and reasoning TDMC domains, but did not add predictive power to a model containing symptoms, insight, and cognition. The appreciation domain was strongly predicted by cognitive biases, insight, and cognition. TDMC was not found to be correlated with personal recovery and post hoc analyses did not find that emotional distress mediated any relationship between cognitive biases and TDMC. Conclusions: The meta-analysis confirms there is a robust association between symptoms and TDMC in psychosis, as currently conceived. The empirical study suggests cognitive biases may be related to TDMC, even after taking into account the contribution of symptoms. Larger studies, perhaps employing experimental procedures, are required to clarify the exact nature of this relationship. The lack of any relationship between TDMC and service-user defined recovery from psychosis is notable, and lends support to those calling for a conceptualisation of TDMC that takes greater account of this concept.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:721166
Date January 2016
CreatorsLarkin, Amanda
ContributorsHutton, Paul ; Whyte, Katie
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/22885

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