| Literature DB >> 26590161 |
Kimberley Anderson1, Neelam Laxhman2, Stefan Priebe3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Social networks of patients with psychosis can provide social support, and improve health and social outcomes, including quality of life. However, patients with psychosis often live rather isolated with very limited social networks. Evidence for interventions targeting symptoms or social skills, are largely unsuccessful at improving social networks indirectly. As an alternative, interventions may directly focus on expanding networks. In this systematic review, we assessed what interventions have previously been tested for this and to what extent they have been effective.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26590161 PMCID: PMC4654911 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-015-0684-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow diagram for paper selection
Summary of study characteristics
| Study | Country | No. participants | Setting | Diagnostic criteria | Disorders featured | Intervention outline | Control | Duration of intervention | Follow-up period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Terzian et al. [ | Italy | 172: Intervention, 173: Control | Community | ICD-10 | Schizophrenia | Staff identified possible areas of interest for patients to take place outside the services’ resources and with members of the community at large. | Routine care | 6 months | 2 years |
| Sheridan et al. [ | Ireland | 52: Intervention, 55: Control | Community | ICD-10 | Schizophrenia | Patients matched with volunteer + €20 monthly stipend for activities. | Stipend only | 2 h a week for 9 months | 9 months |
| Castelein et al. [ | Netherlands | 56: Intervention 50: Control | Mental Health Centres | DSM-IV | Psychosis | Guided peer support group with focus on social network, social support, self-efficacy and quality of life. | Wait list | 16 sessions for 90mins each over 8 months | 8 months |
| Hasson-Ohayon et al. [ | Israel | 33: Intervention, 21: Control | Community | Insufficient information | Schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, depression, bipolar disorder | Social Cognition Interaction Training (SCIT): Social, leisure, support, employment services + social mentoring | Social mentoring | 1 h sessions 3 × per week | Insufficient information |
| Villalta-Gil et al. [ | Spain | 12: Intervention, 9: Control | Inpatients | DSM-IV | Schizophrenia | Integrated Psychological Therapy (IPT) improving social and cognitive functioning, social perception, problem solving, verbal communication + ‘therapy dog’ present in sessions | IPT | 45 minute sessions 2 × per week | 12.5 weeks |
Summary of the risk of bias using the Cochrane Collaboration’s Intervention Review for RCTs
| Study | Random sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding of participants | Blinding of assessor | Incomplete data outcome | Selective reporting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Terzian et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | High risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Sheridan et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | High risk | High risk | Low risk |
| Castelein et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Hasson-Ohayon et al. [ | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | High risk | High risk |
| Villalta-Gil et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |