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Engagement, Adherence, Transition to Community & Course Wrap-Up Demian Rose, MD Rachel Loewy, PhD Linda May, PhD, MFT
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Engagement Challenges Reluctance to attend therapy No prior, or unsuccessful prior treatment Anticipate consumers possible concerns Solicit consumers own description of concerns, prior experiences Address concerns, normalize when appropriate Educate regarding cognitive behavioral approach Refuses medication Educate regarding medications, symptoms could assist Continue to work and engage with consumer separate from medication decision Educate regarding risks of making own medication changes, encourage honesty, provide acceptance of collaboration
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Social isolation Typically social decline and/or withdrawal precede first episode Isolation is a prime aspect of decline in function (along with genetic risk and attenuated psychotic symptoms) Go slow in development of therapeutic alliance, exploration of symptoms Display acceptance, empathy and tailor communication to consumers problems with thought processing, and affect Impact of symptoms Clinician maintains awareness of potential interference of consumer symptoms – as unusual thought content, overvalued beliefs, ideas of reference, suspiciousness, perceptual abnormalities – on communication and engagement Regular feedback to check with consumer regarding her/his understanding – clinician recalibrate based on feedback
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Fear of “going crazy” Experience with family member, and/or exposure to cultural myths, explanations may concern consumer Anticipate and explore consumers impressions and provide education (Explore possible worries even if not offered spontaneously – normalize) Educate regarding improved treatment options, the possible positive outcomes that are not as common a knowledge Stigma Explore consumers myths, impressions, experiences regarding mental illness as presented by peers, family, media Relate treatment of this biologically based disorder to adjustment to other chronic disorders as diabetes Re-explore throughout treatment the consumers gradual adjustment to a chronic illness, including grief/loss of aspects of prior self image
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Engagement techniques Go Slow Develop and test “hypotheses” Focus on the client’s identified problems Include families, but client has the final say on most decisions Use the team
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Adherence techniques All decisions are collaborative Remain open to multiple treatment options If clients refuse treatment, keep the dialogue going Ask permission to follow-up for outcomes
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Take Home Points Neuroscience Medication Psychotherapy
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Neuroscience Psychosis describes 4 clinically related phenomena, all of which can be conceptualized as errors in information processing at multiple levels of analysis
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Neuroscience Causes of psychosis are multi-factorial and the prognosis of psychosis is highly variable, depending on type, risk factors, treatment and psychosocial environment
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Neuroscience Psychosis does not represent one specific type of brain process that is fundamentally different from “normal” (neurotic, etc.) process
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Medication Persistent psychotic symptoms that resist reality testing and impair function should almost always be treated with anti- psychotic medications
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Medication “Prodromal” or ultra-high risk symptoms are not specific enough to be treated with anti-psychotic medication in many cases (cost/benefit analysis)
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Medication The longer psychosis goes untreated by medication, the more treatment-resistant and severe it tends to become
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Psychotherapy It is an outdated myth that psychosis is resistant to psychotherapeutic intervention CBT for psychosis is evidence-based, i.e. it works!
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Psychotherapy Normalize and don’t panic! Focus on alternative explanations, attentional biases and safety behaviors as points of possible intervention
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Coming soon…. Bi-monthly consultation/supervision group
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