1. Dimensions and predictors of clinical and personal recovery in first‐episode psychoses: Results from a cross‐sectional study.
- Author
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Ferrara, Maria, Zaffarami, Giulia, Simonelli, Gabriele, Domenicano, Ilaria, Vecchioni, Ludovica, Toffanin, Tommaso, Folesani, Federica, Zotos, Spyridon, Scrignoli, Chiara, Bertelli, Raffaella, Carozza, Paola, and Grassi, Luigi
- Subjects
CROSS-sectional method ,PSYCHOSES ,BIVARIATE analysis ,PSYCHIATRIC hospital care ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,FUNCTIONAL independence measure - Abstract
Introduction: First episode psychosis (FEP) services ensure higher recovery rates compared to usual care. The aim of this study was to investigate the different dimensions of recovery and its predictors. Methods: This cross‐sectional study recruited within those admitted to the Ferrara FEP service since 2012 that at the time of analysis were still receiving psychiatric care. At admission, demographic, social and clinical information were collected. In September 2022, patients were assessed with the Health of the Nation Outcome Scale to evaluate clinical/functional recovery, the Recovery Assessment Scale to evaluate personal recovery, and the G12 item of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale to evaluate insight. Patients in recovery were compared to those not in recovery by bivariate analyses. Adjusted logistic regressions were performed to investigate predictors of recovery. Results: Within 141 admitted, and 105 still receiving care, 54 patients completed the assessment. Most (51.9%) were in clinical/functional, 61.1% in personal recovery, and 38.8% both. Psychiatric hospitalization positively predicted clinical/functional recovery, whereas being prescribed oral antipsychotics was a negative predictor. Personal recovery was predicted by male sex and showed a negative association with overall severity of symptomatology. Those in personal recovery were more likely to have been prescribed long‐acting antipsychotics, but this was not significant in the multivariable analysis. Poor insight negatively predicted clinical/functional recovery but had no impact on personal recovery. Conclusion: Our findings confirm that clinical/functional and personal recovery are semi‐independent dimensions and not always overlap. Further research is needed to promote interventions targeted at all recovery dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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