Author:
Haley C.,O’Callaghan E.,Hill S.,Mannion N.,Donnelly B.,Kinsella A.,Murtagh A.,Turner N.
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveDespite the scientific evidence, most families of people with schizophrenia in Europe never receive a carer education programme. We evaluated whether a carer education course delivered by telepsychiatry was as effective as a carer education course delivered in situ.MethodWe delivered the carer education course for schizophrenia simultaneously to a carers group in rural north west Ireland (remote) via three ISDN lines and live to a carers group in a city (host). We compared knowledge gains using the Knowledge Questionnaire before and after each course.ResultsFifty-six carers of people with schizophrenia participated in the trial. At baseline, participants at the remote and host centers did not differ in terms of knowledge about schizophrenia. After the course, carers at both centers improved significantly and the knowledge gains between groups were equivalent at 6 weeks.ConclusionTelepsychiatry can deliver effective carer education programmes about schizophrenia and may provide one solution to bridging the chasm between scientific evidence and clinical reality.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
26 articles.
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