학술논문

Randomized Clinical Trial of Cognitive Behavioral Social Skills Training for Schizophrenia: Improvement in Functioning and Experiential Negative Symptoms
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. 82(6)
Subject
Brain Disorders
Behavioral and Social Science
Mind and Body
Mental Health
Clinical Research
Schizophrenia
Serious Mental Illness
Rehabilitation
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.6 Psychological and behavioural
Mental health
Adult
Cognition
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Depression
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Negativism
Problem Solving
Psychotic Disorders
Schizophrenic Psychology
Social Adjustment
Social Skills
Treatment Outcome
cognitive behavioral social skills training
schizophrenia
negative symptoms
functioning
group therapy
Psychology
Clinical Psychology
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveIdentifying treatments to improve functioning and reduce negative symptoms in consumers with schizophrenia is of high public health significance.MethodIn this randomized clinical trial, participants with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (N = 149) were randomly assigned to cognitive behavioral social skills training (CBSST) or an active goal-focused supportive contact (GFSC) control condition. CBSST combined cognitive behavior therapy with social skills training and problem-solving training to improve functioning and negative symptoms. GFSC was weekly supportive group therapy focused on setting and achieving functioning goals. Blind raters assessed functioning (primary outcome: Independent Living Skills Survey [ILSS]), CBSST skill knowledge, positive and negative symptoms, depression, and defeatist performance attitudes.ResultsIn mixed-effects regression models in intent-to-treat analyses, CBSST skill knowledge, functioning, amotivation/asociality negative symptoms, and defeatist performance attitudes improved significantly more in CBSST relative to GFSC. In both treatment groups, comparable improvements were also found for positive symptoms and a performance-based measure of social competence.ConclusionsThe results suggest CBSST is an effective treatment to improve functioning and experiential negative symptoms in consumers with schizophrenia, and both CBSST and supportive group therapy actively focused on setting and achieving functioning goals can improve social competence and reduce positive symptoms.