A Trial of Family Therapy versus a Relatives' Group for Schizophrenia

Abstract The results are reported of a two-year follow-up of a trial of family sessions in the home (including patients) (12 families) versus a relatives' group (excluding patients) (11 families). Subjects were patients with schizophrenia living in high face-to-face contact with high-EE relatives. Patients were maintained on neuroleptic drugs for two years where possible. Relatives' […]

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Psychosocial Treatments for Schizophrenia. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology

Abstract The current state of the literature regarding psychosocial treatments for schizophrenia is reviewed within the frameworks of the recovery model of mental health and the expanded stress-vulnerability model. Interventions targeting specific domains of functioning, age groups, stages of illness, and human service system gaps are classified as evidence-based practices or promising practices according to […]

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Carer psychoeducation in first-episode psychosis: Evaluation outcomes from a structured group programme

Abstract Background:Carers play an important role in supporting client adjustment and relapse prevention following a first psychotic episode. The caring experience however is a stressful and demanding one, and carers require support to develop coping strategies and sustain themselves in their role. Aims:To evaluate a psychoeducation programme provided within a public adult mental health service, […]

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“It Is Left to Me and My God”: Precarity, Responsibility, and Social Change in Family Care for People with Mental Illness in Ghana

Abstract It has been argued that family care contributes to better outcomes for severe mental illness in Africa, and family care is championed as an alternative to institutional treatment; however, poor households are experiencing increasing precarity under global economic changes, which can be exacerbated by chronic illness. This article draws on an ethnographic study in […]

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Using the Theory of Planned Behavior to Improve Treatment Adherence in Mexican Americans with Schizophrenia

Objective Failure to adhere to treatment with antipsychotic medication is the most common cause of relapse among patients with schizophrenia. A novel multi-family group (MFG) intervention, informed by the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB), demonstrated efficacy in increasing medication adherence and decreasing re-hospitalizations in schizophrenia patients. This report explores the hypothesis that the improved outcomes […]

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Home of the Culturally Adapted Psychoeducation project for families of patients with first-episode psychosis and The Culture and Psychosis Working Group
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