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Sleep problems and worrying precede psychotic symptoms during an online intervention for psychosis.

Thies LüdtkeGerit PfuhlSteffen MoritzNina Lee RüeggThomas BergerStefan Westermann
Published in: The British journal of clinical psychology (2020)
Worrying and sleep problems represent important mechanisms of symptom fluctuations during an online intervention for people with psychosis. Our findings further support the notion that worrying and sleep problems are important treatment targets in psychological interventions for people with psychosis. Momentary levels of worrying and quality of sleep can signal subsequent fluctuations of psychotic symptom severity so practitioners should monitor these variables during treatment. Worrying seems to predict subsequent paranoia specifically during treatment whereas quality of sleep predicts both paranoia and auditory verbal hallucinations.
Keyphrases
  • sleep quality
  • physical activity
  • mental health
  • randomized controlled trial
  • bipolar disorder
  • working memory
  • primary care
  • smoking cessation