Telepsychiatry can deliver effective carer education programmes about schizophrenia and may provide one solution to bridging the chasm between scientific evidence and clinical reality.
Our findings indicate that there are gender differences in the amount and type of knowledge gained during a CPP, with female caregivers showing greater knowledge acquisition than their male counterparts in most areas. Interventions designed to assist caregivers may be improved by targeting areas of knowledge specific to each gender. Such an approach might further reduce burden and improve the outcome for their relatives affected by schizophrenia.
This study, which is among the first to examine outcome over five years, supports the efficacy of psycho-education for caregivers in improving outcome for patients. Caregivers should be encouraged to take up psycho-education where it is available.
Objective: To measure the impact of a six-week Carer Psychoeducation Program (CPP) on factors that influence attitudes towards treatment among carers and relatives of people suffering from schizophrenia. We also examined which specific attitudes to treatment the CPP had the most effect on.Method: Between 2002 and 2004, all patients and their relatives continued standard care. During this period, we conducted a historically-controlled open trial, in which 64 relatives completed a 17-item adapted version of the Drug Attitudes Inventory (DAI) before and after the CPP.Results: Attitudes to treatment improved significantly overall (p < 0.001), an improvement most marked in terms of attitudes to health and illness, attitudes towards the physician and attitudes towards the potentially harmful effects of treatment. No statistically significant improvement was found, however, in attitudes to locus of control or the preventative role of treatment.Conclusion: A CPP specifically improves family attitudes towards treatment. This finding is clinically important because such attitudes influence adherence which, in turn, influences outcome. The fact that certain attitudes are influenced by the CPP, while others are not, may help to explain the mechanism through which patient outcomes improve.
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