Affiliation:
1. Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Department of Occupational Therapy, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02115;
2. Department of Psychology, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida 32816;,
3. Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-3270;
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 the extent to which their efficacy is currently supported by meta-analyses and individual randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Evidence-based practices include assertive community treatment (ACT), cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) for psychosis, cognitive remediation, family psychoeducation, illness self-management training, social skills training, and supported employment. Promising practices include cognitive adaptive therapy, CBT for posttraumatic stress disorder, first-episode psychosis intervention, healthy lifestyle interventions, integrated treatment for co-occurring disorders, interventions targeting older individuals, peer support services, physical disease management, prodromal stage intervention, social cognition training, supported education, and supported housing. Implications and future directions are discussed.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,General Medicine
Cited by
286 articles.
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