Adolescent psychotic experiences before and during the COVID‐19 pandemic: a prospective cohort study

Author:

DeVylder Jordan123,Yamaguchi Satoshi34ORCID,Hosozawa Mariko5,Yamasaki Syudo3,Ando Shuntaro6,Miyashita Mitsuhiro3,Endo Kaori3,Stanyon Daniel3,Usami Satoshi47,Kanata Sho8,Tanaka Riki6,Minami Rin6,Hiraiwa‐Hasegawa Mariko39,Kasai Kiyoto610,Nishida Atsushi3

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Social Service Fordham University New York NY USA

2. Silver School of Social Work New York University New York NY USA

3. Unit for Mental Health Promotion, Research Center for Social Science and Medicine Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science Tokyo Japan

4. Center for Research and Development on Transition from Secondary to Higher Education The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

5. Institute for Global Health Policy Research, Bureau of International Health Cooperation National Center for Global Health and Medicine Tokyo Japan

6. Department of Neuropsychiatry, Graduate School of Medicine The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

7. Division of Educational Psychology, Graduate School of Education The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

8. Department of Psychiatry Teikyo University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

9. School of Advanced Science SOKENDAI (Graduate University for Advanced Studies) Hayama Japan

10. The International Research Center for Neurointelligence (WPI‐IRCN) The University of Tokyo Institutes for Advanced Study (UTIAS) Tokyo Japan

Abstract

BackgroundUnderstanding the etiology of psychosis is essential to the development of preventive interventions. The COVID‐19 pandemic provides a rare natural experiment that can expand our understanding of the role of social factors in the trajectories and etiology of psychosis across adolescence, particularly in Tokyo where the prevalence of actual COVID‐19 infection remained low. We hypothesized that the likelihood of self‐reporting psychotic experiences (PEs) would increase following the onset of the COVID‐19 pandemic.MethodsThe Tokyo Teen Cohort (TTC) is a prospective cohort study of adolescents in the general population of the Tokyo metropolitan area, followed from age 10 to 16 years. We used multi‐level linear regression models to test the associations between the phase of the COVID‐19 pandemic and self‐reported PEs.ResultsAmong 1935 adolescents included in the analysis, a rapid increase in PEs occurred at the onset of the COVID‐19 pandemic, following approximately 6 years of steady decline across prior waves. This association was more pronounced for boys compared to girls. This increase became more pronounced as the pandemic moved into later phases, defined based on contemporaneous sociopolitical changes in Tokyo (i.e. changes to school closure, social distancing guidelines, and the state of emergency status).ConclusionsThe steady decline in PEs across adolescence was halted and reversed concurrent with the COVID‐19 pandemic onset, despite very low rates of COVID‐19 infection. This implicates COVID‐19 related socioenvironmental factors as contributory etiological factors in the development of PEs in this adolescent cohort.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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