Ellen P. Lukens
Columbia University
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JAMA Psychiatry | 2015
Jordan E. DeVylder; Ellen P. Lukens; Bruce G. Link; Jeffrey A. Lieberman
IMPORTANCE Suicide is a leading cause of preventable death, especially among individuals with psychotic disorders, and may also be common among nonclinical populations of adults with subthreshold psychotic experiences. Understanding this association has the potential to critically bolster suicide prevention efforts. OBJECTIVES To examine the association between 12-month suicidality and 12-month psychotic experiences and to test the hypotheses that psychotic experiences are associated with increased prevalence of suicidal ideation and suicide attempts during the concurrent period and with greater severity of suicidal behavior. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Cross-sectional survey data were drawn from a large general population-based sample of households in the United States identified through the Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Surveys (2001-2003). Adult household residents (n = 11,716) were selected using a clustered multistage sampling design with oversampling of racial/ethnic minority groups. Logistic regression models were adjusted for potential demographic confounders and co-occurring DSM-IV mental health conditions. EXPOSURES Twelve-month psychotic experiences assessed with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview, version 3.0 psychosis screen. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Twelve-month suicidal ideation and suicide attempts. RESULTS Respondents reporting psychotic experiences were more likely to report concurrent suicidal ideation (odds ratio [OR], 5.24; 95% CI, 2.85-9.62) and suicide attempts (OR, 9.48; 95% CI, 3.98-22.62). Most respondents with psychotic experiences (mean [SE], 65.2% [4.2%]) met criteria for a DSM-IV depressive, anxiety, or substance use disorder. Among respondents with suicidal ideation, those with psychotic experiences were likely to make an attempt during the concurrent 12-month period (OR, 3.49; 95% CI, 1.05-11.58) when adjusting for co-occurring psychiatric disorders. In contrast, depressive (OR, 1.67; 95% CI, 0.62-4.52), anxiety (OR, 1.57; 95% CI, 0.40-6.09), and substance use disorders (OR, 1.64; 95% CI, 0.24-11.17) did not reliably identify those at risk for attempts among respondents with suicidal ideation. The mean (SE) 12-month prevalence of suicide attempts among individuals reporting ideation and psychotic experiences and meeting criteria for any psychiatric disorder was 47.4% (10.9%) compared with 18.9% (4.8%) among those with just ideation and a disorder. Psychotic experiences were especially prevalent among individuals reporting severe attempts and may account for nearly one-third of attempts with intent to die (population attributable risk, 29.01%) in the United States annually. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Assessment of psychotic experiences among individuals with suicidal ideation has potential clinical and public health utility in reducing the prevalence of suicide attempts, particularly attempts with intent to die.
Journal of The American Academy of Child Psychiatry | 1983
Ellen P. Lukens; Joaquim Puig-Antich; Jacqueline Behn; Raymond R. Goetz; Maryann Tabrizi; Mark Davies
The Psychosocial Schedule (PSS) is an instrument derived from several pre-existing rating scales, which was designed to measure and record clinical data (other than the symptoms of the present episode of disorder) which are likely to be relevant to child psychiatric disorder. These data include: developmental and past symptomatic history, demographics, family functioning, and relationships. Reliability was tested by interrater and test-retest designs with mothers of prepubertal children. Overall, the instrument appeared to be quite reliable. Although it is subject to minor modifications, especially for use with adolescents, it is concluded that the PSS is a practical instrument which should be tested now in adolescents, and can be utilized in future studies with prepubertal subjects.
Psychiatric Services | 2014
Jordan E. DeVylder; Hans Oh; Cheryl Corcoran; Ellen P. Lukens
OBJECTIVE Psychosis-like experiences may be clinically significant given their demonstrated associations with concurrent psychological distress and the later development of diagnosable psychotic disorders. Prior studies of treatment for psychosis-like experiences have yielded conflicting results. The aims of this study were to investigate help seeking and need for care among individuals with psychosis-like experiences in a large general population sample. METHODS Data from the Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Surveys (N=10,541) were used to examine help-seeking behaviors among survey respondents who reported psychosis-like symptoms over a 12-month period. Adjusted odds ratios were calculated for a variety of help-seeking variables, with control for demographic factors and co-occurring psychiatric conditions. RESULTS Among the 10,541 respondents, 3.4% reported a psychosis-like experience in the past 12 months. Respondents who reported psychosis-like experiences were more than twice as likely as those who did not to seek treatment. Those who reported such experiences but who did not seek treatment were more likely to have felt the need for or to have been encouraged by others to seek treatment and less likely to have felt that they had no psychiatric problem. Associations with unmet need for care were largely attributable to co-occurring psychiatric disorders. CONCLUSIONS Respondents with psychosis-like experiences had elevated rates of help seeking, as well as significant unmet clinical need among those not in treatment.
Biological Psychiatry | 1998
Dolores Malaspina; Jill M. Harkavy Friedman; Charles A. Kaufmann; Gerard E. Bruder; Xavier F. Amador; David H. Strauss; Scott R. Clark; Scott Yale; Ellen P. Lukens; Helle Thorning; Ray Goetz; Jack M. Gorman
BACKGROUND Although schizophrenia is presumed to be heterogeneous, there has been limited success distinguishing familial from sporadic cases. We used psychobiological measures to examine heterogeneity, as they may be closer to neurobiology than symptoms. Smooth pursuit eye movement quality (SPEM) and dichotic listening (DL) tests to tones and words were used to assess hemispheric laterality asymmetry. METHODS Forty-six research unit patients participated in assessments of family history (FH) and physiological measures. FH was categorized by three exclusive groups: FH-1 patients had a chronic schizophrenia-related psychosis in a first-degree relative, FH-2 had it in second-degree relative, and FH-3 had no family member with a reoccurrence. RESULTS Analysis of variance showed a significant group difference for SPEM and DL tones. SPEM was significantly worse in all three schizophrenia groups than for the normal comparison subjects. Among the schizophrenia groups, the nonfamilial group (FH-3) had the worst SPEM quality, FH-2 had intermediate quality, and FH-1 had the best quality. Conversely, only the nonfamilials (FH-3) had normal right hemispheric lateralization for tones, whereas familials did not, and FH-2 again had intermediate values. The lateralization quotient for DL words did not significantly differ among the groups. CONCLUSIONS SPEM was affected most in sporadic, not familial schizophrenia, whereas dichotic listening was most affected in familial schizophrenia. This double dissociation supports the utility of the familial/sporadic distinction and suggests that etiological factors in different forms of schizophrenia may impact principally on distinct neurobiological substrates, despite similar patient phenomenology.
Schizophrenia Research | 2013
Jordan E. DeVylder; Hans Oh; Lawrence H. Yang; Leopoldo J. Cabassa; Fang pei Chen; Ellen P. Lukens
Previous studies have shown variation in the prevalence and incidence of psychosis across immigrant groups, but the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Stress related to acculturation may increase risk for psychosis among immigrant groups. In this study we examine the association between acculturative stress and psychotic-like experiences in a sample of Latino- and Asian-American immigrants to the United States in the National Latino and Asian American Study (n=2434). Acculturative stress was associated with visual and auditory hallucinations among Asians, but only with hearing voices among Latinos. Increased risk for psychotic-like experiences among Latinos was primarily associated with younger age of immigration. Acculturative stress appears to be a promising candidate mechanism explaining the relationship between immigration and psychosis, particularly among Asian Americans. Ethnic differences may reflect variability between groups that integrate more readily into the host culture and those that are subject to greater discrimination and environmental adversity.
Journal of Psychiatric Practice | 2002
Ellen P. Lukens; Helle Thorning; Steven P. Lohrer
This study examines the complex and varied effects associated with having a brother or sister with a severe and persistent mental illness (SPMI) on the lives of adult siblings without chronic disability. Through five focus group interviews, 19 participants were asked to describe the impact that having a brother or sister with mental illness had on their lives. Codes and categories derived from the text of the transcribed interviews were grouped into broad themes. The respondents described the manifestations and challenges of contending with the SPMI of an adult sibling. They focused on gaps in services and communication with mental health providers, particularly with regard to timing of interventions and identifying readiness for treatment, as well as their own mental health needs. The article concludes with a discussion of the increased need for exchange of information and clarity of communication among family members and providers, following best practice guidelines that are well documented but not well implemented.
Community Mental Health Journal | 2007
Steven P. Lohrer; Ellen P. Lukens; Helle Thorning
Siblings of persons with mental illness who assume primary caregiving roles experience substantial and tangible economic impacts associated with this responsibility. This study investigated mailed survey responses collected from 156 adult siblings of persons with mental illness from New York State to examine instrumental costs associated with providing support to siblings with illness. Genders of both siblings, severity of the relatives’ mental illness, and number of surviving parents in the family distinguished those occupying primary caregiving responsibility from those not in primary roles. Current caregivers incurred greater instrumental costs in the form of financial expenses, time spent in care activities, and crisis involvement than did those who were not primary care providers. Additional demographic and behavioral factors related to siblings with and without illness were associated with specific dimensions of instrumental expenditure. As siblings become increasingly engaged in caregiving, social service professionals must assume leadership in promoting programs and policies that meaningfully support family involvement for relatives with mental illness.
Social Work in Mental Health | 2011
Wan-Yi Chen; Ellen P. Lukens
Caregiving for a family member with severe and persistent mental illness places significant demands on the caregiver. Yet caregivers also report personal rewards from the experience. Multiple regression analyses were conducted for 137 parent and sibling caregivers to compare risk and protective factors for well being, subjective burden, and depressive symptoms among respondents. Sibling status predicted increased well-being. Grief and family stress functioned as risk factors for decreased well-being, more depressive symptoms, and increased subjective burden. Pride for the relative contributed to depressive symptoms but protected against burden, and both informal social support and formal support from providers offered a buffer against depressive symptoms for all caregivers. Intervention strategies to promote resilience and address challenges for caregivers are discussed.
Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2013
Jordan E. DeVylder; Ellen P. Lukens
People with first-degree relatives with schizophrenia are at an elevated risk of developing the disorder themselves. High rates of psychotic symptoms in non-psychotic disorders, high rates of comorbidity in psychotic disorders, and diversity of outcomes following psychosis-risk states together suggest that this vulnerability may be for psychiatric conditions in general, not limited to schizophrenia. In this study, data from the National Survey of American Life (NSAL) were used to examine the association between having a first-degree relative with schizophrenia and the lifetime development of a range of non-psychotic axis I psychiatric disorders using adjusted odds ratios. Having a relative with schizophrenia was associated with increased risk for most non-psychotic psychiatric conditions examined, including those expected to be associated with schizophrenia (affective, anxiety, and substance use disorders) and those not expected (bulimia, disorders of childhood onset), excluding respondents with lifetime psychotic symptoms and controlling for demographic factors. Family history of schizophrenia among this predominantly African-American and Afro-Caribbean sample appears to be a risk factor for a range of axis I diagnoses, supporting a continuous rather than categorical nature of psychiatric vulnerability. Future studies should examine whether these associations are due to genetic or environmental factors, or both.
Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2017
Jordan E. DeVylder; Courtney D. Cogburn; Hans Oh; Deidre M. Anglin; Melissa Edmondson Smith; Tanya L. Sharpe; Hyun-Jin Jun; Jason Schiffman; Ellen P. Lukens; Bruce G. Link
Social defeat has been proposed as the common mechanism underlying several well-replicated risk factors for sub-threshold psychotic experiences (PEs) identified in epidemiological research. Victimization by the police may likewise be socially defeating among vulnerable individuals and, therefore, may be associated with elevated risk for PEs. However, no prior studies have examined the relation between police victimization and PEs. We tested the hypothesis that exposure to police victimization (ie, physical, sexual, psychological, and neglect) would be associated with increased odds for PEs in the Survey of Police-Public Encounters data (N = 1615), a general population sample of adults from 4 US cities. Respondents who reported each type of police victimization were more likely to report PEs in logistic regression analyses (all P < .01), most of which were significant even when adjusting for demographic variables, psychological distress, and self-reported crime involvement (adjusted OR range: 1.30 to 7.16). Furthermore, the prevalence of PEs increased with greater exposure to police victimization in a linear dose-response relation, OR (95% CI) = 1.44 (1.24-1.66). These findings suggest that police victimization is a clinically important and previously unreported risk factor for PEs in the urban US population. These findings support the need for community-based outreach efforts and greater police training to reduce the prevalence of this exposure, particularly in socially disadvantaged urban communities.