scholarly journals mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge

2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. e34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dror Ben-Zeev ◽  
Emily A Scherer ◽  
Jennifer D Gottlieb ◽  
Armando J Rotondi ◽  
Mary F Brunette ◽  
...  

Background mHealth interventions that use mobile phones as instruments for illness management are gaining popularity. Research examining mobile phone‒based mHealth programs for people with psychosis has shown that these approaches are feasible, acceptable, and clinically promising. However, most mHealth initiatives involving people with schizophrenia have spanned periods ranging from a few days to several weeks and have typically involved participants who were clinically stable. Objective Our aim was to evaluate the viability of extended mHealth interventions for people with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders following hospital discharge. Specifically, we set out to examine the following: (1) Can individuals be engaged with a mobile phone intervention program during this high-risk period?, (2) Are age, gender, racial background, or hospitalization history associated with their engagement or persistence in using a mobile phone intervention over time?, and (3) Does engagement differ by characteristics of the mHealth intervention itself (ie, pre-programmed vs on-demand functions)? Methods We examined mHealth intervention use and demographic and clinical predictors of engagement in 342 individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders who were given the FOCUS mobile phone intervention as part of a technology-assisted relapse prevention program during the 6-month high-risk period following hospitalization. Results On average, participants engaged with FOCUS for 82% of the weeks they had the mobile phone. People who used FOCUS more often continued using it over longer periods: 44% used the intervention over 5-6 months, on average 4.3 days a week. Gender, race, age, and number of past psychiatric hospitalizations were associated with engagement. Females used FOCUS on average 0.4 more days a week than males. White participants engaged on average 0.7 days more a week than African-Americans and responded to prompts on 0.7 days more a week than Hispanic participants. Younger participants (age 18-29) had 0.4 fewer days of on-demand use a week than individuals who were 30-45 years old and 0.5 fewer days a week than older participants (age 46-60). Participants with fewer past hospitalizations (1-6) engaged on average 0.2 more days a week than those with seven or more. mHealth program functions were associated with engagement. Participants responded to prompts more often than they self-initiated on-demand tools, but both FOCUS functions were used regularly. Both types of intervention use declined over time (on-demand use had a steeper decline). Although mHealth use declined, the majority of individuals used both on-demand and system-prompted functions regularly throughout their participation. Therefore, neither function is extraneous. Conclusions The findings demonstrated that individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders can actively engage with a clinically supported mobile phone intervention for up to 6 months following hospital discharge. mHealth may be useful in reaching a clinical population that is typically difficult to engage during high-risk periods.

2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-45
Author(s):  
Gretchen Snethen, PhD, LRT/CTRS ◽  
Bryan P. McCormick, PhD, CTRS ◽  
Rachel L. Smith, MS ◽  
Marieke Van Puymbroeck, PhD, CTRS

Social isolation and nonparticipation in the community are chronic issues for adults with schizophrenia spectrum disorders that can lead to poorer health outcomes. The Independence through Community Access and Navigation (I-CAN) intervention was developed as a theoretically grounded intervention that uses motivational interviewing to understand the interests and motivations of clients for participation. The intervention is designed to support participation in community-based activities by providing access and skill acquisition in a community environment. Participation between the recreational therapist and the participant decreases over time to encourage the individual to begin to independently access his or her community. This article presents the treatment planning steps and the implementation protocol for the I-CAN intervention.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mihaela Fadgyas Stanculete ◽  
Octavia Capatina

Negative symptoms are relatively frequent across schizophrenia spectrum disorders diagnostic categories and they represent deficits in different domains such as emotional, volitional and experiential. Even though negative symptoms have long been recognized as a core feature of schizophrenia, their definition has been changing over time. Different conceptualization classified this category of symptoms as primary or secondary, persistent or transient. At the current moment there are five agreed upon domains of the concept of negative symptoms, which are separated into two dimensions—experience (anhedonia, avolition, asociality) and expression (blunted affect, alogia). Multiple mechanistic pathways have been proposed and investigated for each dimension and for each domain. The current chapter attempts to address recent advances in the literature regarding the concepts, definitions and classifications of negative symptoms and their etiological model.


1997 ◽  
Vol 24 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 44
Author(s):  
L. Erlenmeyer-Kimling ◽  
D. Rock ◽  
M. Janal ◽  
G.P. Amminger ◽  
E. Squires-Wheeler ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S291-S291
Author(s):  
Min-yi Chu ◽  
Simon S Y Lui ◽  
Karen S Y Hung ◽  
P C Sham ◽  
Henry K F Mak ◽  
...  

Abstract Background There is growing evidence suggesting that the abnormal pituitary volume (PV) may be an essential deficit in schizophrenia spectrum disorders, and PV may change depending on the stage of the illness. However, previous studies assessing PV in schizophrenia spectrum disorders, especially in ultra-high risk individuals, were confounding. The present study aimed to assess whether there would be alteration of the PV in patients with first-episode schizophrenia and their non-affected first-degree relatives. Methods This study recruited 147 subjects, including subjects with 62 first-episode schizophrenia (31 man, 31 female), 25 non-psychotic first-degree relatives (11 male, 14 female), and 60 healthy controls (30 male, 30 female). All of them underwent a T1 weighted image magnetic resonance imaging using 3T MRI Scanner (Siemens, Germany). All volumes were examined with the 3D-Slicer 4.10.1 (Surgical Planning Laboratory, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, USA; http://www. slicer.org/). The PV was traced in all coronal slices with well-defied boundaries (such as diaphragma sellae (superiorly), the sphenoid sinus (inferiorly), the cavernous sinuses(bilaterally)). The infundibular stalk was excluded while the bright posterior pituitary was included. All images were tranced manually by a trained rater who was blind to the participants’ group assignment. In a random subset of 24 cases, both the inter-rater reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient r=0.916, p<0.001) and the intra-rater reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient r=0.924 p<0.001) were high. We conducted MANCOVA with gender, and whole brain volumes (WBV) as covariates to compare the PV among the groups. Results We found no significant differences in gender ratio, age, and WBV (p>0.05) among the three groups, but patients with first-episode schizophrenia showed shorter length of education than healthy controls (p<0.001). As expected, we found that male participants in general (Mean ± SD: 486.85 ± 100.24) exhibited a prominently smaller PV than female participants (Mean ± SD: 562.13 ± 102.90) after controlling for WBV (t=25.087, p<0.001). Findings from MANCOVA analysis showed that although first-episode schizophrenia patients (Mean ± SD: 523.81 ± 116.41) and healthy controls (Mean ± SD: 513.17 ± 103.57) showed no significant difference in PV (F=0.581, p=0.447), there was a trend of statistical significance in their non-psychotic first-degree relatives (Mean ± SD: 557.85 ± 93.58) compared with healthy controls (F=3.334, p=0.072). We also found a negative correlation between the duration of treatment and PV in female schizophrenia patients (r=-0.398, p=0.029), whose mean duration of treatment was 4.71 months (SD=2.18 months). No significant correlation was observed in in male patients. Discussion Our findings found no alteration of PV in first-episode schizophrenia patients but a trend of enlargement was observed in their non-psychotic first-degree relatives. Moreover, female schizophrenia patients with longer duration of treatment exhibited smaller PV. These findings suggested that the enlarged PV might be an early detection signal for individuals with potentially high risk of developing into schizophrenia, and such an enlargement of PV might be responsive to antipsychotic medications.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Cornblatt ◽  
M. Obuchowski ◽  
S. Roberts ◽  
S. Pollack ◽  
L. Erienmeyer-Kimling

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document