JAMA psychiatry

Thinking Abilities and Differences in First-Time Psychosis Patients Not Yet on Antipsychotic Medication

Updated

Abstract

Cognitive impairment at psychosis onset was identified with a large effect size across all domains measured, including speed of processing (Hedges g = -1.16).

  • Individuals with first-episode psychosis demonstrated significant cognitive impairment compared to healthy controls in various domains.
  • The domains affected included speed of processing, verbal learning, visual learning, working memory, attention, reasoning/problem solving, and executive function.
  • The effect sizes for cognitive impairments ranged from -0.90 to -1.16, indicating substantial deficits.
  • There was greater variability in cognitive function among individuals with first-episode psychosis, with coefficient of variation ratios ranging from 1.34 to 1.92.
  • These findings highlight the need to identify individuals with more severe cognitive issues for potential cognitive remediation.

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