What About
Psychotherapy For Schizophrenia?
Antipsychotic drugs have proven
to be crucial in relieving the
psychotic symptoms of
schizophrenia hallucinations,
delusions, and
incoherence
but are not consistent in relieving the
behavioral symptoms of the
disorder. Even when patients with schizophrenia are relatively free of
psychotic symptoms, many still have extraordinary difficulty with
communication, motivation, self-care, and establishing and maintaining
relationships with others. Moreover, because patients with schizophrenia
frequently become ill during the critical career-forming years of life (e.g.,
ages 18 to 35), they are less likely to complete the training required for
skilled work. As a result, many with schizophrenia not only suffer thinking and
emotional difficulties, but lack social and work skills and experience as well.
It is with these psychological, social, and occupational problems that
psychosocial treatments may help most. While psychosocial approaches have
limited value for acutely psychotic patients (those who are out of touch with
reality or have prominent hallucinations or delusions), they may be useful for
patients with less severe symptoms or for patients whose psychotic symptoms are
under control. Numerous forms of psychosocial therapy are available for people
with schizophrenia, and most focus on improving the patients social
functioning whether in the hospital or community, at home, or on the
job. Some of these approaches are described here. Unfortunately, the
availability of different forms of treatment varies greatly from place to
place.
Rehabilitation
Broadly defined, rehabilitation includes a wide array of non-medical
interventions for those with schizophrenia. Rehabilitation programs emphasize
social and vocational training to help patients and former patients overcome
difficulties in these areas. Programs may include vocational counseling, job
training, problem-solving and money management skills, use of public
transportation, and social skills training. These approaches are important for
the success of the community-centered treatment of schizophrenia, because they
provide discharged patients with the skills necessary to lead productive lives
outside the sheltered confines of a mental hospital.
Individual Psychotherapy
Individual psychotherapy involves regularly scheduled talks between the
patient and a mental health professional such as a psychiatrist, psychologist,
psychiatric social worker, or nurse. The sessions may focus on current or past
problems, experiences, thoughts, feelings, or relationships. By sharing
experiences with a trained empathic person talking about their world
with someone outside it individuals with schizophrenia may gradually
come to understand more about themselves and their problems. They can also
learn to sort out the real from the unreal and distorted. Recent studies
indicate that supportive, reality-oriented, individual psychotherapy, and
cognitive-behavioral approaches that teach coping and problem-solving skills,
can be beneficial for outpatients with schizophrenia. However, psychotherapy is
not a substitute for antipsychotic medication, and it is most helpful once drug
treatment first has relieved a patients psychotic symptoms.
Family Education
Very often, patients with schizophrenia are discharged from the hospital
into the care of their family; so it is important that family members learn all
they can about schizophrenia and understand the difficulties and problems
associated with the illness. It is also helpful for family members to learn
ways to minimize the patients chance of relapse for example, by
using different treatment adherence strategies and to be aware of the
various kinds of outpatient and family services available in the period after
hospitalization. Family psychoeducation, which includes teaching
various coping strategies and problem-solving skills, may help families deal
more effectively with their ill relative and may contribute to an improved
outcome for the patient.
Self-Help Groups
Self-help groups for people and families dealing with schizophrenia are
becoming increasingly common. Although not led by a professional therapist,
these groups may be therapeutic because members provide continuing mutual
support as well as comfort in knowing that they are not alone in the problems
they face. Self-help groups may also serve other important functions. Families
working together can more effectively serve as advocates for needed research
and hospital and community treatment programs. Patients acting as a group
rather than individually may be better able to dispel stigma and draw public
attention to such abuses as discrimination against the mentally ill.
Family and peer support and advocacy groups are very active and provide
useful information and assistance for patients and families of patients with
schizophrenia and other mental disorders.
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also in this section:
treatment overview | antipsychotic meds
med side-effects | psychotherapy
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causes | treatment
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