Abstract
In the aftermath of deinstitutionalization, when current public policy dictates greater community management of schizophrenia, patients and their families play an increasing role in the teatment of the illness. Since mental health professionals often neglect to educate them on the causes, symptoms, and treatment of schizophrenia, patients and their families are often misinformed, fearful, and ill-equipped to aid in treatment. The authors describe a brief family educational intervention and the questionnaire that was used to compare the knowledge of patients and their families who received the intervention with the knowledge of those who did not. The findings suggest that patients and their families in family treatment programs can acquire and retain information about schizophrenia more readily than patients and families involved in individual treatment. This knowledge enables them to become more effective participants in aftercare and helps surmount the problems associated with posthospital adjustment.
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CITATION STYLE
McGill, C. W., Falloon, I. R. H., Boyd, J. L., & Wood Siverio, C. (1983). Family educational intervention in the treatment of schizophrenia. Hospital and Community Psychiatry, 34(10), 934–938. https://doi.org/10.1176/ps.34.10.934
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