Thank you to Beatson and colleagues for their interest in our work. Reference Kelleher and DeVylder1 There are, of course, as they suggest, differences between mental disorders in the population and mental disorders that we see in the clinic – this is a result of selection bias in clinical samples, termed Berkson's bias, which we suggested in our paper might be a reason for differences between population data and clinic data.
Research suggests that 20–50% of clinic samples with borderline personality disorder (BPD) report hallucinations. Reference Schroeder, Fisher and Schafer2 In our population sample, the prevalence of hallucinations in individuals with BPD was 14%. When you consider recent research findings on psychotic symptoms, the difference in prevalence of hallucinations in community v. clinical samples is not surprising: we and others have shown that the presence of psychotic (or attenuated psychotic) symptoms (specifically, hallucinations and delusional beliefs) in non-psychotic disorders is associated with more severe psychopathology on a number of counts, Reference Kelleher, Devlin, Wigman, Kehoe, Murtagh and Fitzpatrick3,Reference Kelleher, Cederlof and Lichtenstein4 including number of comorbid disorders, cognitive impairment, functional impairment, suicidality and poor treatment response. That is, the prevalence of hallucinations increases as the severity of psychopathology increases, as do (crucially) the odds of presenting to clinical services. This provides an optimal environment for breeding Berkson's bias.
The above findings, it should be noted, are in no way unique to BPD. Clinical studies that systematically assess for hallucinations find much higher prevalences than do community studies. Looking at a clinic sample of people with major depressive disorder, for example, Chambers et al found that 40% had psychotic symptoms when systematically assessed for them. Reference Chambers, Puig-Antich, Tabrizi and Davies5 Similarly, we found that 46% of a clinic sample of adolescents (with a wide variety of mental disorders) had one or more psychotic symptom when systematically assessed (the most common was hallucinations). Reference Kelleher, Devlin, Wigman, Kehoe, Murtagh and Fitzpatrick3
An interesting point is that clinical anecdote would suggest that hallucinations are more common in BPD than in many other mental disorders. Bearing in mind that our study was, to our knowledge, the first to systematically compare across BPD and other mental disorders, and is awaiting replication studies, we must question why this clinical belief is common. It could be that individuals with BPD are more likely to spontaneously report experiences of hallucinations in clinic (without being specifically asked about them) than is the case, for example, for individuals with anxiety disorders. However, the results of this study demonstrate that individuals with anxiety disorders do, in fact, report hallucinations as frequently as people with BPD when they are specifically asked about them – the key part of that sentence being ‘when they are specifically asked about them’; perhaps we are not as systematic as we could be in asking all patients about psychotic phenomena. It is, however, important to point out that our findings relate to community samples; it may, in fact, be the case that hallucinations are more prevalent in clinical samples with BPD than in clinical samples with other disorders. We plan to investigate this and look forward to sharing the results.
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