Disentangling depression and anxiety in relation to neuroticism, extraversion, suicide, and self-harm among adult psychiatric inpatients with serious mental illness

Br J Clin Psychol. 2016 Nov;55(4):349-370. doi: 10.1111/bjc.12098. Epub 2015 Dec 30.

Abstract

Objectives: Little is known about depression-anxiety comorbidity and its association with personality traits and suicide/self-harm in adult psychiatric inpatients with serious mental illness (SMI), impacting clinical assessment and treatment. This study sought to determine the symptom structure of depression-anxiety comorbidity and its relation to neuroticism, extraversion, and suicide/self-harm behaviour in this high-risk population.

Design: Nine hundred and sixty-two adults receiving inpatient care at a private psychiatric hospital completed questionnaires at admission.

Methods: Confirmatory factor analyses compared a bifactor solution specifying a general distress factor and two specific depression and anxiety factors against unidimensional and correlated factors solutions. The bifactor solutions' factors were subsequently correlated with neuroticism and extraversion subscales and pre-hospitalization suicide/self-harm behaviours.

Results: The bifactor model rendered superior fit to sample data and a robust general factor - accounting for 77.61% of common item variance - providing the first evidence for a tripartite structure of depression and anxiety among adult inpatients. The bifactor solution-outputted independent general distress, depression, and anxiety factors positively correlated with neuroticism, the personality dimension corresponding to trait negative affectivity. The general distress and depression factors associated with recent self-harm, but factors showed no associations with prior suicidal behaviour.

Conclusions: In adult psychiatric inpatients, general distress substantially underlies comorbid depression and anxiety symptom variation and may contribute to recent incidence of self-harm. Transdiagnostic assessments and interventions targeting general distress may temper depression, anxiety, and self-harm in adult inpatients.

Practitioner points: Clinical implications Depression-anxiety comorbidity symptomology in adult psychiatric inpatients is primarily composed of general distress. General distress and specific depression are associated with recent self-harm but not suicidal behaviour. Assessing and treating general distress rather than depression or anxiety specifically may best mitigate comorbid depression and anxiety, and reduce self-harm behaviour in this clinical population. Cautions and limitations The large sample lacked ethnocultural diversity, and data were cross-sectional. The use of brief self-report measures to assess depression and anxiety may have reduced measurement range.

Keywords: anxiety; comorbidity; depression; self-harm; serious mental illness; suicide.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Anxiety / epidemiology
  • Anxiety / psychology
  • Anxiety Disorders / epidemiology
  • Anxiety Disorders / psychology*
  • Comorbidity
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Depression / epidemiology
  • Depression / psychology
  • Depressive Disorder / epidemiology
  • Extraversion, Psychological*
  • Factor Analysis, Statistical
  • Female
  • Hospitals, Psychiatric
  • Humans
  • Inpatients / psychology*
  • Inpatients / statistics & numerical data
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Neuroticism
  • Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
  • Self-Injurious Behavior / epidemiology
  • Self-Injurious Behavior / psychology*
  • Stress, Psychological / epidemiology
  • Stress, Psychological / psychology*
  • Suicidal Ideation
  • Suicide*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires