| Literature DB >> 19319218 |
Abstract
Schizophrenia is a disruptive and distressing illness, not only for the person affected but also for family members. Family intervention, particularly in a group format using a diverse range of modalities, is thought to effectively satisfy the informational needs of families and enhance their coping abilities when caring for a relative with schizophrenia, and thus reduce a patient's relapse from illness. This study tested the hypothesis that participants in a family psychoeducation and mutual support group would demonstrate significant improvements in levels of patient and family functioning and shorter duration of re-hospitalization than families in routine care. A randomized controlled trial was conducted with a sample of 68 Chinese families of schizophrenia sufferers in Hong Kong, who were randomly assigned to either a family psychoeducation and support group (n = 34), or a routine care group (n = 34). The interventions were delivered at two psychiatric outpatient clinics over a nine-month period. Results of multivariate analyses of variance test indicated that the psychoeducation and support group reported greater improvements on family and patient functioning and shorter lengths of patient hospitalizations at the two post-tests (one month and one year after completion of the intervention), compared with the routine care group. The findings substantiate that within a Chinese context, psychoeducation and mutual support group intervention can effectively help families care for a mentally ill relative.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese.; Psychoeducation; family caregivers; group intervention; mutual support; schizophrenia
Year: 2008 PMID: 19319218 PMCID: PMC2582821 DOI: 10.2174/1874434600802010028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Nurs J ISSN: 1874-4346
Content Outline of Psychoeducation & Mutual Support Group Program
| Session | Goals | Content | Responsible Persons |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (Family caregivers only) | To orientate to the program and to establish trusting relationship between participants and instructors | Orientation to the program and introduction of group leaders and members to one another Negotiation of goals and roles and responsibilities; Ensuring confidentiality An overview of the topics and their relevance to group members | Research psychiatric nurse |
| 2 (Family caregivers and patients) | To understand schizophrenia, its symptoms and short-term and long-term effects to patients and families | Presentation of a video of one family caring for a person with schizophrenia, with descriptions of symptoms and illness behavior of patient Discussion of the importance of knowledgeable involvement by family members to patient and the whole family. Initial discussion of the mental illness and its effects to family | Research psychiatric nurse |
| 3 (Family caregivers, family members and patients) | To understand the theoretical concepts, etiology and the course of schizophrenia | An overview of theories of schizophrenia from a bio-psychosocial perspective Discussion of the psychiatric conceptualization of schizophrenia, a review of etiology, symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment | Research nurse and one psychiatrist |
| 4-5 (family caregivers only) | To recall and share about illness symptoms and their effects on family life | Information sharing about symptoms and illness behavior; discussion about their effects to family lives Sharing of intense emotions toward patient and suggestion on how to deal with negative emotions to patient An overview of treatments and rehabilitation programs | Research nurse and researcher |
| 6 (family caregivers and patients) | To realize the effects of medications and its compliance | Explanation of positive and negative effects of medications for schizophrenia Explanation of the importance of drug compliance and maintenance Discussion of the specific problems related to the side-effects | Research nurse and one psychiatrist |
| 7-8 (Family caregivers only) | To openly share and more understand about individual concerns and cultural issues | Discussion about Chinese culture of family and mental illness Sharing of intense emotions and feelings about patient care provision and family interactions More information sharing about schizophrenia and its related illness behavior Discuss about the ways to deal with negative emotions to patient | Research nurse |
| 9-10 (family caregivers only) | To improve the family environment and social support | Introduction of the role of environmental stress as a risk factor for acute exacerbations of schizophrenia Discussion of the significance of family as a source of social support and its role and responsibility within the social environment of patient Presentation of family stress and expressed emotion and improvement of family relationships and emotional environment | Research nurse and researcher |
| 11-13 (family caregivers only) | To manage psychosocial needs for themselves, patient and family | Discussion about each member’s psychosocial needs Information about medications, managing illness, and available mental health services Effective communication skills with patient and seeking social support from others Exploration of home management strategies e.g. finance and budgets, environment and hygiene | Research nurse and a clinical psychologist |
| 14-16 (family caregivers only) | To adopt new roles and challenges and skills of coping and patient management | Sharing of coping skills and mutual support Enhancing problem solving skills by working on some individual patient management situations Conducting behavioral rehearsals of interaction with patient and other family members within group Practicing coping skills learned during the sessions to real family life (in-between group sessions) and evaluate the results | Research nurse |
| 17-18 (family caregivers and patients) | To review the previous learning and to prepare for group termination | A review and summary of the materials covered in previous sessions Preparation and discussion on termination issues e.g. separation anxiety, independent living and use of coping skills learned Evaluation of learning experiences and goals achievement Explanation of post-intervention assessment and follow-up taken in the following months | Nurse researcher |
Note. Total intervention period of at least 36 weeks.
Socio-Demographic Characteristics of Families in Psychoeducation Group and Standard Care (N = 68)
| Characteristics | Psychoeducation and Support Group (n = 34) | Standard Care (n = 34) | z Score or t-Test (df = 66), Two Tailed |
|---|---|---|---|
| z = 1.03, p = 0.23 | |||
| Female | 21 (61.8) | 20 (58.8) | |
| 42.1 ± 6.1 | 43.2 ± 7.8 | t = 1.03, p = 0.10 | |
| 20-29 | 6 (17.6) | 7 (20.6) | |
| 30-39 | 12 (35.3) | 11 (32.4) | |
| 40-49 | 12 (35.3) | 13 (38.2) | |
| 50 or above | 4 (11.8) | 3 ( 8.8) | |
| z = 1.19, p = 0.10 | |||
| Primary school or below | 10 (29.4) | 9 (26.5) | |
| Secondary school | 19 (55.9) | 20 (58.8) | |
| University or graduate school | 5 (14.7) | 5 (14.7) | |
| z = 1.00, p = 0.29 | |||
| Child | 10 (29.4) | 11 (32.4) | |
| Parent | 9 (26.5) | 9 (26.5) | |
| Spouse | 10 (29.4) | 10 (29.4) | |
| Others (e.g. sibling & grandparent) | 6 (17.6) | 5 (14.7) | |
| 16,500± 1,280 | 13,300± 1,650 | t = 1.21, p = 0.12 | |
| 5,000 – 10,000 | 6 (17.6) | 7 (20.6) |
Note: An independent sample t-test (two-tailed) or z score was used to compare the socio-demographic variables of families between the three groups.
denotes frequency (f %) or mean ± standard deviation.
US$1 = HK$7.8
Outcome Scores at Time 1, 2 & 3 and MANOVA test (Group x Time) Results
| Instrument | Psychoeducation Group (n = 34) | Routine Care (n = 34) | F (1, 66) | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time 1 | Time 2 | Time 3 | Time 1 | Time 2. | Time 3 | ||||||||
| M | (SD) | M | (SD) | M | (SD) | M | (SD) | M | (SD) | M | (SD) | ||
| FBIS (0-50) | 29.81 | (7.01) | 24.69 | (6.10) | 23.41 | (7.92) | 30.26 | (8.06) | 28.49 | (6.01) | 26.84 | (8.10) | 4.32 |
| Financial burden | 9.40 | (2.98) | 8.53 | (1.01) | 7.52 | (1.12) | 9.58 | (2.08) | 9.23 | (1.78) | 8.80 | (1.51) | 4.43 |
| Family routine | 4.06 | (0.98) | 3.35 | (0.80) | 3.19 | (0.71) | 4.10 | (0.97) | 3.80 | (0.98) | 3.56 | (1.00) | 4.32 |
| Leisure | 4.73 | (1.01) | 3.20 | (0.88) | 3.01 | (0.80) | 4.32 | (0.62) | 4.10 | (1.11) | 3.94 | (1.02) | 5.03 |
| Interaction | 5.89 | (1.10) | 4.70 | (0.81) | 4.31 | (0.91) | 5.88 | (0.78) | 5.61 | (1.24) | 5.58 | (1.01) | 4.31 |
| Physical health | 2.24 | (0.82) | 2.08 | (0.80) | 1.99 | (0.75) | 2.38 | (0.91) | 2.03 | (0.72) | 2.00 | (0.76) | 3.10 |
| Mental health | 4.12 | (1.68) | 3.64 | (0.90) | 3.38 | (0.82) | 4.00 | (0.89) | 3.86 | (1.10) | 3.69 | (0.90) | 4.26 |
| FAD (7-28) | 17.35 | (4.53) | 21.08 | (5.01) | 23.69 | (4.03) | 18.22 | (4.45) | 19.50 | (5.01) | 20.59 | (5.10) | 4.52 |
| Problem solving | 2.45 | (0.67) | 2.98 | (0.89) | 3.25 | (0.83) | 2.33 | (0.68) | 2.70 | (0.70) | 2.94 | (0.71) | 5.01 |
| Communication | 2.33 | (0.78) | 2.94 | (0.98) | 3.09 | (0.81) | 2.49 | (0.77) | 2.51 | (0.54) | 2.85 | (0.71) | 4.89 |
| Roles | 2.58 | (0.65) | 2.97 | (0.77) | 3.28 | (0.80) | 2.67 | (0.61) | 2.87 | (0.88) | 2.98 | (0.70) | 4.30 |
| Affective responses | 2.32 | (0.98) | 2.88 | (0.86) | 3.14 | (0.97) | 2.61 | (0.91) | 2.89 | (0.67) | 2.89 | (0.80) | 4.12 |
| Affective involvement | 2.61 | (1.01) | 2.99 | (0.90) | 3.28 | (0.89) | 2.80 | (0.90) | 2.95 | (0.69) | 3.03 | (0.98) | 4.01 |
| Behaviour control | 2.68 | (0.88) | 3.03 | (0.90) | 3.17 | (1.00) | 2.69 | (0.98) | 2.73 | (0.70) | 2.98 | (0.70) | 4.05 |
| General functioning | 2.39 | (0.99) | 2.98 | (0.72) | 3.48 | (0.80) | 2.45 | (0.69) | 2.67 | (0.61) | 2.87 | (0.90) | 4.93 |
| FSSI (1-16) | 3.81 | (1.10) | 3.98 | (1.03) | 4.39 | (1.09) | 3.79 | (1.20) | 3.97 | (1.12) | 4.28 | (1.00) | 2.33 |
| SLOF (43-215) | 126.8 | (16.8) | 147.7 | (25.8) | 163.9 | (30.1) | 121.2 | (17.3) | 115.1 | (20.9) | 120.1 | (24.8) | 4.68 |
| Self maintenance | 41.9 | (10.8) | 48.8 | (13.1) | 56.8 | (19.0) | 39.2 | (13.8) | 36.6 | (12.9) | 38.8 | (12.1) | 4.88 |
| Social functioning | 39.2 | (11.8) | 46.1 | (16.1) | 52.3 | (15.1) | 38.1 | (11.5) | 34.5 | (11.0) | 39.7 | (16.0) | 4.42 |
| Community living skills | 46.4 | (10.1) | 52.8 | (17.8) | 54.8 | (20.3) | 43.9 | (12.1) | 40.7 | (12.0) | 43.6 | (12.0) | 4.30 |
| Re-hospitalization | 27.6 | (8.3) | 25.8 | (10.1) | 27.8 | 10.3) | 28.2 | (10.3) | 28.0 | (12.1) | 28.6 | (13.2) | 2.18 |
Note:
Possible range of scores of each scale indicated in parenthesis.
Length of stay in a psychiatric hospital or in-patient unit at Time 1,2 and 3, in terms of average days of hospitalization.
Time 1 = baseline measurement at the start of intervention; Time 2 = one month after intervention; Time 3 = 12 months after intervention.
FAD = Family Assessment Device; FBIS = Family Burden Interview Schedule; SSQ6 = Six-item Social Support Questionnaire; FSSI = Family Support Service Index; SLOF = Specific Level of Functioning Scale.
p < .01,
p < .001.