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Clinical high risk;; Prodrome;; Stress;; PERI Life Events Scale;; Daily;; Stress Inventory;; Daily hassles;; LIFE EVENTS;; PSYCHOSIS;; SCHIZOPHRENIA;; RELIABILITY;; VALIDITY;; SCALE;; ONSET;; Psychiatry
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Full-Text Articles in Medical Molecular Biology
Stress Exposure And Sensitivity In The Clinical High-Risk Syndrome: Initial Findings From The North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study (Napls), H. D. Trotman, C. W. Holtzman, E. F. Walker, J. M. Addington, C. E. Bearden, K. S. Cadenhead, T. D. Cannon, B. Cornblatt, R. K. Heinssen, T. H. Mcglashan, +5 Additional Authors
Stress Exposure And Sensitivity In The Clinical High-Risk Syndrome: Initial Findings From The North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study (Napls), H. D. Trotman, C. W. Holtzman, E. F. Walker, J. M. Addington, C. E. Bearden, K. S. Cadenhead, T. D. Cannon, B. Cornblatt, R. K. Heinssen, T. H. Mcglashan, +5 Additional Authors
Journal Articles
There is inconsistent evidence for increased stress exposure among individuals at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis. Yet similar to patients with a diagnosed psychotic illness, the preponderance of evidence suggests that CHR individuals tend to experience stressful life events (LE) and daily hassles (DH) as more subjectively stressful than healthy individuals. The present study utilizes data from the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study Phase 2 (NAPLS-2) to test the hypotheses that (1) CHR individuals manifest higher self-reported stress in response to both LE and DH when compared to healthy controls (HC), (2) group differences in self-reported stress increase with …