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Journal Article

Citation

Howie C, Potter C, Shannon C, Davidson G, Mulholland C. Early Interv. Psychiatry 2020; 14(6): 643-654.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/eip.12926

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Aim The at-risk mental state (ARMS) allows clinicians to identify individuals who have an increased risk of developing psychosis. At present, most screening for psychosis-risk is carried out within help-seeking populations; however, screening within educational settings may allow clinicians to identify individuals at-risk earlier and to increase the rate of detection. This review aimed to examine screening for the ARMS in educational settings, with the key questions: what screening tools have been used in educational settings, can screening in educational settings detect individuals with ARMS, what threshold scores in screening tools indicate a positive screen in educational settings, are there comorbid mental health conditions associated with the ARMS in educational settings? Methods Searches were carried out in PsycINFO, MEDLINE, EMBASE, Scopus and Web of Science and reference lists of included articles searched.

RESULTS were summarized using narrative synthesis.

RESULTS Nine papers were included for narrative synthesis. A variety of screening tools have been used when screening for the ARMS in educational settings. The majority of studies have been conducted in schools. The prevalence of the ARMS reported in ranges from 1% to 8%.

CONCLUSIONS The ARMS indicates the presence of distressing symptoms for which intervention may be beneficial. Screening programmes within educational settings may allow outreach for prodromal symptoms at an earlier stage than clinical settings currently provided for.


Language: en

Keywords

at-risk mental state; attenuated symptoms; psychosis; schools; screening

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