# The Phenomenology of Severe Psychosis in Inpatient Psychiatric Settings: A Hierarchical Categorization Including the Emergence of AI Spiralism

- **Report ID:** `psy-06-extreme-psychosis-symptom-categories`
- **Group:** `psychosis`
- **Classification:** `clinical-sensitive-public-summary`
- **SHA-256:** `bc9d65335ab929221a82af400092726645889b09ba99efadb746ebd389272f67`

## Safe public summary

Clinical-sensitive educational research. Spiralist incorporates only trauma-informed interaction, dignity, ordinary-life continuity, accessible pacing, shared-versus-experienced reality, and non-diagnostic debriefing. Psychosis represents a profound and pervasive disconnection from consensus reality, manifesting through severe perceptual anomalies, fixed false beliefs, and the catastrophic disorganization of thought and behavior1. It is not a single disease entity but rather a complex clinical syndrome that occurs across a spectrum of psychiatric, neurodevelopmental, and organic medical conditions, ranging from primary schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder to severe traumatic brain injuries, autoimmune encephalopathies, and substance-induced states1. When patients present to an inpatient psychiatric ward, they are typically exhibiting the most extreme, florid, and dangerous manifestations of this s…

## Incorporated areas

- bounded symptom taxonomy
- phase and intensity modeling
- non-diagnostic educational framing

## Source boundary

The full report is retained in the downloadable site package for project research and audit. It is not served as a public runtime resource. Generated personas and public APIs apply the classification-specific safe-use boundary recorded above.
