| Literature DB >> 16920788 |
Josef Bäuml1, Teresa Froböse, Sibylle Kraemer, Michael Rentrop, Gabriele Pitschel-Walz.
Abstract
Psychoeducation was originally conceived as a composite of numerous therapeutic elements within a complex family therapy intervention. Patients and their relatives were, by means of preliminary briefing concerning the illness, supposed to develop a fundamental understanding of the therapy and further be convinced to commit to more long-term involvement. Since the mid 1980s, psychoeducation in German-speaking countries has evolved into an independent therapeutic program with a focus on the didactically skillful communication of key information within the framework of a cognitive-behavioral approach. Through this, patients and their relatives should be empowered to understand and accept the illness and cope with it in a successful manner. Achievement of this basic-level competency is considered to constitute an "obligatory-exercise" program upon which additional "voluntary-exercise" programs such as individual behavioral therapy, self-assertiveness training, problem-solving training, communication training, and further family therapy interventions can be built. Psychoeducation looks to combine the factor of empowerment of the affected with scientifically founded treatment expertise in as efficient a manner as possible. A randomized multicenter study based in Munich showed that within a 2-year period such a program was related to a significant reduction in rehospitalization rates from 58% to 41% and also a shortening of intermittent days spent in hospital from 78 to 39 days. Psychoeducation, in the form of an obligatory-exercise program, should be made available to all patients suffering from a schizophrenic disorder and their families.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16920788 PMCID: PMC2683741 DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbl017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Bull ISSN: 0586-7614 Impact factor: 9.306
Psychoeducation—Effective Therapeutic Factors From Supportive Therapy (ST) and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
| Therapeutic Dimensions | ST | CBT |
|---|---|---|
| Therapeutic interaction (relationship level) | XXX | XXX |
| Clarification (causal attribution) | XX | X |
| Enhancement of coping competence (control attribution) | X | XX |
Goals of Psychoeducation
| Ensuring patients' and their relatives' attainment of “basic competence” |
| Facilitating an informed and self-responsible handling of the illness |
| Deepening the patients' role as an “expert” |
| “Cotherapists”—strengthening the role of relatives |
| Optimal combination of professional therapeutic methods and empowerment |
| Improving insight into illness and improvement of compliance |
| Promoting relapse prevention |
| Engaging in crisis management and suicide prevention |
| Supporting healthy components |
| Economizing informational and educational activities |
Fig. 1PIP Study: Rehospitalization Rates in Percent After 1 Year (n = 163) and 2 Years (n = 153), *P < .05.
Fig. 2PIP Study: Days in Hospital After 1 Year (n = 163) and 2 Years (n = 153). *Mean 39 (SD 90.4) vs mean 78 (SD 127.2), P < .05.
Nonspecific Effective Factors of Psychoeducation
| Development of a good therapeutic relationship |
| Unconditional appreciation |
| Empathic response to participants |
| Respectful attention to subjectively deviant opinions |
| Need- and resource-orientated procedures |
| Stimulation of hope and reassurance |
| Encouragement of personal exchange of experiences |
| Facilitation of “shared fate” |
Key Information Relating to the Illness and Treatment Measures
| Term “schizophrenia” |
| Symptoms (positive and negative symptoms) |
| Origin of symptoms: dopamine excess with disturbance in information processing |
| Vulnerability-stress–coping model |
| Medication and side effects |
| Psychotherapeutic interventions and suicide prevention |
| Psychosocial measures |
| Early warning signs, crisis plan, and relapse prevention |
Topics With a Positive Overtone
| Feeling of being ingenious and special |
| Sensitivity as a sign of particular individuality |
| Pride in own role as an “expert” of psychosis |
| Expansion of coping competency through psychoeducation |
| Psychosis as an object of fascination |
| Acceptance of “being as I am” |
| Looking for meaning by coping with illness |
| Solidarity of group with “shared fate” |
| Support from social network |
Topics With a Negative Overtone
| Insecurity |
| Being out of one's depth |
| Alleged rareness and singleness of own fate |
| Anger and grief |
| Resignation |
| Struggling with own fate |
| Isolation |
Important Psychotherapeutic Elements Within Psychoeducation
| Therapeutic Interaction |
| Medical textbook–based general standpoint of therapist as orientation guide |
| Simultaneous respect and esteem for subjective individual opinions of afflicted |
| Modeling and imitation of therapists |
| Modeling and imitation of patients who are successful in handling their illness |
| Experience of solidarity in group of patients with shared fate |
| Exchanging experiences with others |
| Clarification |
| Conveyance of basic competence regarding knowledge of schizophrenia |
| Professional simplification of complex facts |
| Interpretation of complicated scientific information |
| Visualization of key information |
| Interactive style of providing information |
| Presentation of “missing links” |
| Induction of insight into illness and its requisite treatment measures |
| Structure and organization into individual therapeutic measures |
| Two-way conveyance of information |
| Transmission of understanding and experiences of “enlightenment” |
| Enhancement of Coping Competence |
| Focus on resources and not on deficits |
| Optimized utilization of psychopharmaca |
| Optimized crisis management behavior |
| Adequate processing of grief |
| Modification of life plan |
| Transformation of patients into “experts” of their illness (knowledge is power) |
| Enabling relatives to develop into “cotherapists” |
| Strengthening the protective potential of the family |