학술논문

Randomized Controlled Trial of Cognitive Behavioral Social Skills Training for Older Consumers With Schizophrenia: Defeatist Performance Attitudes and Functional Outcome
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. 21(3)
Subject
Clinical and Health Psychology
Health Services and Systems
Health Sciences
Psychology
Schizophrenia
Mental Health
Behavioral and Social Science
Brain Disorders
Serious Mental Illness
Mind and Body
Clinical Research
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Rehabilitation
6.6 Psychological and behavioural
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Aged
Aging
Attitude
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Compliance
Problem Solving
Psychotherapy
Group
Schizophrenic Psychology
Single-Blind Method
Social Adjustment
Treatment Outcome
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Cognitive Sciences
Geriatrics
Clinical sciences
Health services and systems
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
ObjectivesTo determine whether Cognitive Behavioral Social Skills Training (CBSST) is an effective psychosocial intervention to improve functioning in older consumers with schizophrenia, and whether defeatist performance attitudes are associated with change in functioning in CBSST.DesignAn 18-month, single-blind, randomized controlled trial.SettingOutpatient clinic at a university-affiliated Veterans Affairs hospital.ParticipantsVeteran and non-veteran consumers with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (N = 79) age 45-78.InterventionsCBSST was a 36-session, weekly group therapy that combined cognitive behavior therapy with social skills training and problem-solving training to improve functioning. The comparison intervention, goal-focused supportive contact (GFSC), was supportive group therapy focused on achieving functioning goals.MeasurementsBlind raters assessed functioning (primary outcome: Independent Living Skills Survey), CBSST skill mastery, positive and negative symptoms, depression, anxiety, defeatist attitudes, self-esteem, and life satisfaction.ResultsFunctioning trajectories over time were significantly more positive in CBSST than in GFSC, especially for participants with more severe defeatist performance attitudes. Greater improvement in defeatist attitudes was also associated with better functioning in CBSST, but not GFSC. Both treatments showed comparable significant improvements in amotivation, depression, anxiety, positive self-esteem, and life satisfaction.ConclusionsCBSST is an effective treatment to improve functioning in older consumers with schizophrenia, and both CBSST and other supportive goal-focused interventions can reduce symptom distress, increase motivation and self-esteem, and improve life satisfaction. Participants with more severe defeatist performance attitudes may benefit most from cognitive behavioral interventions that target functioning.Trial registryClinicalTrials.Gov #NCT00237796 (http://clinicaltrials. gov/show/NCT00237796).