Both psychiatric patients and their relatives benefit from learning about mental illness and how to cope with it, but the specific interests of these consumers remain unclear. To determine specific educational needs and to compare the needs of different consumers, a questionnaire survey was conducted with a sample of patients with schizophrenia and affective disorder and their relatives. Both patients and relatives reported strong interest in learning more about psychiatric illness and strategies for coping with common problems, but patients with schizophrenia were less interested than patients with affective disorder and both sets of relatives. Discriminant analyses revealed that needs differed as a function of patient diagnosis, patient/relative status, and relatives' membership of a self-help and advocacy organisation. Consumers of mental health services are capable of specifying their own educational needs, and educational programmes should be tailored to meet these.
This study examined the validity and utility of role play for assessing social competence of chronic psychiatric patients. Demographically matched groups of patients with schizophrenia (n = 57), schizoaffective disorder (« = 16), major affective disorder (n = 33), and a nonpatient control group (n = 20) were assessed on a role-play test, interview measures of role functioning in the community, and a problem-solving discussion with a significant other. A subsample was reassessed on the same instruments 6 months later. Behavior on the role-play test discriminated the groups, was highly correlated with ratings on the other measures, and was relatively stable over the retest interval. The results were interpreted as providing strong support for the value of role play as a general measure of social functioning.
The social skills and social perception of schizophrenia patients in response to negative affect was examined as a function of family expressed emotion (EE). Patients participated in a role-play test, a social perception test, and a problem-solving discussion with a family member and were assessed on several measures of symptomatology. EE of family members was evaluated with the Camberwell Family Interview. On the role-play test, patients with less critical relatives became more assertive in response to increased negative affect from a confederate portraying either a family member or friend, but patients with highly critical relatives did not. Patients with highly critical relatives were also less assertive when confronted with negative affect from a confederate portraying a family member rather than a friend. The behaviors of both relatives and patients during a family problem-solving interaction were related to the EE dimensions of criticism, emotional overinvolvement, and warmth. Patient gender was also related to family problem solving but was independent of EE. Patient ratings of affect on a videotaped social perception task were not related to family EE, and there were few differences in psychopathology between patients with high and low EE relatives. The results support the validity of the EE construct as an index of relatives' affective behavior and suggest that patients' social skills, such as assertiveness, may mediate negative affective exchanges in their families.
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