Who does not get cognitive-behavioral therapy for schizophrenia when therapy is readily available?
Who does not get cognitive-behavioral therapy for schizophrenia when therapy is readily available?
OBJECTIVE: The evidence base for using cognitive-behavioral therapy in schizophrenia is well established; it is recommended in guidelines by the Schizophrenia Patient Outcomes Research Team.
METHODS: Data were examined regarding referral patterns for patients with schizophrenia who were seen by one of four psychiatrists at the mental health center providing services to West Southampton (England).
RESULTS: Of the 142 patients identified, 69 had and 73 had not been referred for cognitive-behavioral therapy. Patients tended not to be referred if they were considered to be doing well and not in need of therapy or were unlikely to engage.
CONCLUSIONS: In a location where cognitive-behavioral therapy for schizophrenia was readily available, half of all patients were considered appropriate for referral. Improved engagement skills and more assertive outreach by therapists and consideration by referrers of the benefits of relapse prevention might bring the benefits of cognitive-behavioral therapy to a still broader group.
female, schizophrenia, adolescent, england, retrospective studies, community mental health centers, standards, patients, health services accessibility, referral and consultation
1792-1794
Kingdon, David Graham
14cdc422-10b4-4b2d-88ec-24fde5f4329b
Kirschen, Holly
e14a0247-97a9-44a2-ae49-f29888ac219f
December 2006
Kingdon, David Graham
14cdc422-10b4-4b2d-88ec-24fde5f4329b
Kirschen, Holly
e14a0247-97a9-44a2-ae49-f29888ac219f
Kingdon, David Graham and Kirschen, Holly
(2006)
Who does not get cognitive-behavioral therapy for schizophrenia when therapy is readily available?
Psychiatric Services, 57 (12), .
(doi:10.1176/appi.ps.57.12.1792).
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The evidence base for using cognitive-behavioral therapy in schizophrenia is well established; it is recommended in guidelines by the Schizophrenia Patient Outcomes Research Team.
METHODS: Data were examined regarding referral patterns for patients with schizophrenia who were seen by one of four psychiatrists at the mental health center providing services to West Southampton (England).
RESULTS: Of the 142 patients identified, 69 had and 73 had not been referred for cognitive-behavioral therapy. Patients tended not to be referred if they were considered to be doing well and not in need of therapy or were unlikely to engage.
CONCLUSIONS: In a location where cognitive-behavioral therapy for schizophrenia was readily available, half of all patients were considered appropriate for referral. Improved engagement skills and more assertive outreach by therapists and consideration by referrers of the benefits of relapse prevention might bring the benefits of cognitive-behavioral therapy to a still broader group.
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Published date: December 2006
Keywords:
female, schizophrenia, adolescent, england, retrospective studies, community mental health centers, standards, patients, health services accessibility, referral and consultation
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 62467
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/62467
ISSN: 1075-2730
PURE UUID: 121f5fb6-ff84-444c-b80d-5ff2b3eb80dc
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Date deposited: 12 Sep 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:30
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Author:
David Graham Kingdon
Author:
Holly Kirschen
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