| Literature DB >> 22033704 |
C Arango1.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2000 PMID: 22033704 PMCID: PMC3181618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dialogues Clin Neurosci ISSN: 1294-8322 Impact factor: 5.986
| Predictor of violence common to patients with clinically stable schizophrenia and the general population |
| • Sociodemographic factors (age, gender, economic status, and unemployment) |
| • Drug abuse |
| • Antisocial personality |
| • Family history of violence |
| • Previous violence |
| Clinical predictors of violence in schizophrenic patients with exacerbation of psychotic symptoms |
| • Type and characteristics of delusions |
| - Delusions causing fear and anguish |
| - Persecutory delusions |
| - Active seeking of information to confirm or refute the delusional belief |
| - Systematization and conviction of the delusion |
| - Quality of the hallucinations |
| • Previous violence |
| • Less insight into symptoms |
| • Higher PANSS general psychopathology scores |
| Approaches to reducing noncompliance |
| • Use of depot medication |
| • Patient recognition of need for treatment |
| • Close monitoring of adherence |
| • Use of drugs with better side-effect profiles |
| • Subjective experience |
| Future actions |
| • Treatment programs that are effective in the prevention of violence |
| • Investigation of the variables associated with violence that are amenable to therapeutic approaches |
| • Strategies to increase compliance with treatment, which may translate into a reduction in number of violent episodes and fewer psychotic relapses[ |
| • Treatments reducing poor impulse control |
| • Competent, well-developed community support and comprehensive mental health follow-up to identify and successfully deal with early signs of violent behavior |
| • Development of validated instruments for assessment of future violence |