Hogarty G E, Greenwald D, Ulrich R F, Kornblith S J, DiBarry A L, Cooley S, Carter M, Flesher S
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, PA, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 1997 Nov;154(11):1514-24. doi: 10.1176/ajp.154.11.1514.
Previous analyses of the personal and social adjustment of outpatients with schizophrenia have either relied on the assessment of unrepresentative patients who survived without relapse or used analyses that included relapse assessments, a potential confound when different rates of relapse existed among treatment conditions. The authors' goal was to conduct a study of the effects of personal therapy on outcome that was designed to take into consideration the effects of relapse.
They evaluated the effectiveness of personal therapy over 3 years after hospital discharge among 151 patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. The patients were randomly assigned to receive personal therapy or contrasting therapies in one of two concurrent trials. One trial included patients who were living with family (N = 97); the other included patients who were living independent of family (N = 54). Patients were assessed at 6-month intervals over 3 years of treatment on measures of personal and social adjustment; patients who relapsed and restabilized and those who did not relapse were included.
Personal therapy had positive effects on broad components of social adjustment (role performance) but had few differential effects on symptoms, and patients receiving personal therapy remained more anxious than patients who received family or supportive therapy. For patients who were living with family, personal therapy led to better outcomes in overall performance than did the other treatments. Although family therapy had only one positive effect on patients' social adjustment, the personal adjustment (residual symptoms) of patients who received family therapy appeared to improve more than that of patients receiving personal or supportive therapy. For patients not living with family, personal therapy was more successful than supportive therapy in improving work performance and relationships out of the home. Longitudinal effects of personal therapy on symptoms were similar to those of family and supportive therapies, particularly in the first 2 years, but personal therapy effect sizes increased over time on measures of social adjustment.
Personal therapy has pervasive effects on the social adjustment of patients with schizophrenia that are independent of relapse prevention. Supportive therapy, with or without family intervention, produces adjustment effects that peak at 12 months after discharge and plateau thereafter. However, personal therapy, a definitive psychosocial intervention, continues to improve the social adjustment of patients in the second and third years after discharge. Brief treatment would appear to be less effective than a long-term, disorder-relevant intervention for schizophrenia.
以往对精神分裂症门诊患者个人及社会适应情况的分析,要么依赖于对未复发存活患者的评估,而这些患者不具代表性,要么采用包含复发评估的分析方法,但当不同治疗条件下复发率不同时,这可能会产生混淆。作者的目标是开展一项关于个人治疗对结局影响的研究,该研究旨在考虑复发的影响。
他们评估了151例精神分裂症或分裂情感性障碍患者出院后3年期间个人治疗的效果。在两项同期试验中,患者被随机分配接受个人治疗或对比治疗。一项试验纳入与家人同住的患者(N = 97);另一项试验纳入不与家人同住的患者(N = 54)。在3年的治疗期间,每隔6个月对患者的个人及社会适应情况进行评估;纳入复发后重新稳定的患者以及未复发的患者。
个人治疗对社会适应的广泛组成部分(角色表现)有积极影响,但对症状的差异影响较小,接受个人治疗的患者比接受家庭治疗或支持性治疗的患者更焦虑。对于与家人同住的患者,个人治疗在总体表现上比其他治疗产生更好的结局。虽然家庭治疗对患者的社会适应只有一个积极影响,但接受家庭治疗的患者的个人适应(残留症状)似乎比接受个人治疗或支持性治疗的患者改善得更多。对于不与家人同住的患者,个人治疗在改善工作表现和家庭外人际关系方面比支持性治疗更成功。个人治疗对症状的纵向影响与家庭治疗和支持性治疗相似,尤其是在最初2年,但随着时间推移,个人治疗在社会适应测量指标上的效应大小有所增加。
个人治疗对精神分裂症患者的社会适应有普遍影响,且独立于预防复发。支持性治疗,无论有无家庭干预,产生的适应效果在出院后12个月达到峰值,此后趋于平稳。然而,个人治疗作为一种明确的心理社会干预措施,在出院后的第二年和第三年继续改善患者的社会适应。对于精神分裂症而言,短期治疗似乎不如长期的、与疾病相关的干预有效。