2013
DOI: 10.1111/eip.12115
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Adolescent family perceptions in the At‐Risk Mental State for psychosis

Abstract: These findings highlight that ARMS patients are likely to report higher levels of perceived family dysfunction compared to a community sample of young people. However, the mechanisms by which family perceptions may contribute to the development of distressing psychotic symptoms remain unclear and require further study. Family work, with a focus upon improving perceived expressed emotion, nurturing behaviours and hostility may at this stage represent a feasible adjunct therapy for those with ARMS.

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Cited by 10 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
(103 reference statements)
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“…The young person and carer were given separate rooms in which to complete the questionnaires. The FPS has been used in other studies focusing upon child and adolescent psychopathology (Welsh and Tiffin, ) while it is the only tool of its kind to be developed around a factor analysis; allowing researchers the opportunity to identify differential dimensions of family functioning between respondents and clinical groups.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The young person and carer were given separate rooms in which to complete the questionnaires. The FPS has been used in other studies focusing upon child and adolescent psychopathology (Welsh and Tiffin, ) while it is the only tool of its kind to be developed around a factor analysis; allowing researchers the opportunity to identify differential dimensions of family functioning between respondents and clinical groups.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All fifteen papers measured criticism. Eight found negative forms of criticism worsened symptoms and functioning (O"Brien et al, 2006;Schlosser et al, 2010;Welsh and Tiffin, 2015;Domínguez-Martínez et al, 2014;McFarlane and Cook, 2007;Tsai et al, 2015). Tsai et al (2015) found an effect of ethnicity and gender for criticism: Individuals with critical Latino fathers had more negative symptoms than non-Latino white fathers, albeit with a small sample size.…”
Section: Ee Componentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Six studies measured hostility (O"Brien et al, 2006;. One reported ARMS families were more likely to have higher levels of hostility compared to healthy controls (Welsh and Tiffin, 2015), whilst on average parents reported more EOI and positive remarks than critical, hostile or warm comments (Meneghelli et al, 2011). Schlosser et al (2010) found 68% of the high-EE caregivers exhibited hostility.…”
Section: Hostilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…First, we undertook a selective literature review of publications that were potentially relevant to the planned interviews (Hippman et al, 2016;Meiser et al, 2008;Peay, Rosenstein, & Biesecker, 2013;Ratheesh et al, 2016;Ryan, Virani, & Austin, 2015;Shaw, Abrams, & Marteau, 1999;Vallarino et al, 2015;Welsh & Tiffin, 2015) (see Supporting Information) and identified topics that could be incorporated into open-ended questions (if necessary) to help promote discussions.…”
Section: Interview Planning and Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%