Model fidelity of assertive community treatment for clients with first-episode psychosis: A target group-specific application

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Abstract

Assertive community treatment (ACT) is described as a team treatment model designed to provide assertive, outreaching, comprehensive, community-based, rehabilitation-oriented and supportive psychiatric services for people with severe mental illness as reported by Drake et al. (Psychiatr Serv 52: 179-182, 2001) and Teague et al. (Psychiatr Serv 68: 216-232, 1998). This study explores variations in the way the original components of ACT are implemented for the target group of clients with a first-episode psychosis, and establishes whether these variations lead the treatment model to a higher, more valuable, outcome level. The study also describes how to achieve this optimally effective application of target group-specific treatment services. © 2008 The Author(s).

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Verhaegh, M. J. M., Bongers, I. M. B., Kroon, H., & Garretsen, H. F. L. (2009). Model fidelity of assertive community treatment for clients with first-episode psychosis: A target group-specific application. Community Mental Health Journal, 45(1), 12–18. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-008-9168-1

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