4.2 Article

The Paradox of Help-Seeking Behaviour in Psychosis

Journal

PSYCHIATRIC QUARTERLY
Volume 92, Issue 2, Pages 549-559

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11126-020-09833-3

Keywords

Early detection; Insight; Double bookkeeping; Qualitative; Psychosis

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It is not well understood what motivates individuals with psychosis to seek help or how the process of seeking help may be complicated by psychosis. In a qualitative study involving nine patients with a first episode of psychosis, it was found that most patients did not initially recognize their experiences as symptoms of a mental disorder when seeking help. Instead, the decision to seek help was often driven by social factors rather than by a clear understanding of their condition.
Little is known about which factors actually motivate individuals with psychosis to seek help or how psychosis may complicate the help-seeking process. The aim of this article is to examine the steps of this process and how psychopathological experiences might affect and interfere with it. In this qualitative study we interviewed nine patients with a first episode of psychosis. The interviews were transcribed and analysed according to the principles of thematic analysis using inductive as well as deductive methods. The crucial step in help-seeking behaviour seemed to be for the patients to identify thekindof problem they were facing. None of them clearly recognized their psychotic or otherwise anomalous experiences as symptoms of a mental disorder, and most of them did not seriously question the reality status of these experiences. For most of the patients it was an untenable social situation that caused them to seek help. When they did seek help the majority did not initially contact the psychiatric services. It seems paradoxical to expect patients who experience symptoms of psychosis for the first time to be able to unambiguously identify them as being exactly that and accordingly seek out psychiatric help, as diminished insight into illness is an inherent feature of psychosis. However, the phenomenon of 'double bookkeeping' seemed to provide an opening for seeking help from psychiatry in spite of compromised insight. This observation should be included in everyday clinical work and in future information campaigns.

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