1. Treatment Retention Among Patients Participating in Coordinated Specialty Care for First-Episode Psychosis: a Mixed-Methods Analysis.
- Author
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Hamilton, Jane E., Srivastava, Devika, Womack, Danica, Brown, Ashlie, Schulz, Brian, Macakanja, April, Walker, April, Wu, Mon-Ju, Williamson, Mark, and Cho, Raymond Y.
- Subjects
MENTAL health services ,THERAPEUTICS ,BEHAVIOR therapy ,PSYCHOSES ,COGNITIVE therapy - Abstract
Young adults experiencing first-episode psychosis have historically been difficult to retain in mental health treatment. Communities across the United States are implementing Coordinated Specialty Care to improve outcomes for individuals experiencing first-episode psychosis. This mixed-methods research study examined the relationship between program services and treatment retention, operationalized as the likelihood of remaining in the program for 9 months or more. In the adjusted analysis, male gender and participation in home-based cognitive behavioral therapy were associated with an increased likelihood of remaining in treatment. The key informant interview findings suggest the shared decision-making process and the breadth, flexibility, and focus on functional recovery of the home-based cognitive behavioral therapy intervention may have positively influenced treatment retention. These findings suggest the use of shared decision-making and improved access to home-based cognitive behavioral therapy for first-episode psychosis patients may improve outcomes for this vulnerable population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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