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Patient- and family-reported experiences of their treating teams in early psychosis services in Chennai, India and Montreal, Canada.

Authors :
Taksal, Aarati
Mohan, Greeshma
Malla, Ashok
Rabouin, Daniel
Levasseur, MaryAnne
Rangaswamy, Thara
Padmavati, Ramachandran
Joober, Ridha
Margolese, Howard C.
Schmitz, Norbert
Iyer, Srividya N.
Source :
Asian Journal of Psychiatry; Aug2024, Vol. 98, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cross-cultural psychosis research has mostly focused on outcomes, rather than patient and family experiences. Therefore, our aim was to examine differences in patients' and families' experiences of their treating teams in early intervention services for psychosis in Chennai, India [low- and middle-income country] and Montreal, Canada [high-income country]. Patients (165 in Chennai, 128 in Montreal) and their families (135 in Chennai, 110 in Montreal) completed Show me you care , a patient- and family-reported experience measure, after Months 3, 12, and 24 in treatment. The measure assesses the extent to which patients and families view treating teams as being supportive. A linear mixed model with longitudinal data from patient and family dyads was used to test the effect of site (Chennai, Montreal), stakeholder (patient, family), and time on Show me you care scores. This was followed by separate linear mixed effect models for patients and families with age and gender, as well as symptom severity and functioning as time-varying covariates. As hypothesized, Chennai patients and families reported more supportive behaviours from their treating teams (β=4.04; β= 9, respectively) than did Montreal patients (Intercept =49.6) and families (Intercept=42.45). Higher symptom severity over follow-up was associated with patients reporting lower supportive behaviours from treating teams. Higher levels of positive symptoms (but lower levels of negative symptoms) over follow-up were associated with families reporting lower supportive behaviours from treating teams. There was no effect of time, age, gender and functioning. The levels to which treating teams are perceived as supportive may reflect culturally shaped attitudes (e.g., warmer attitudes towards healthcare providers in India vis-à-vis Canada) and actual differences in how supportive treating teams are, which too may be culturally shaped. Being expected to be more involved in treatment, Chennai families may receive more attention and support, which may further reinforce their involvement. Across contexts, those who improve over follow-up may see their treating teams more positively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18762018
Volume :
98
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Asian Journal of Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178733294
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajp.2024.104118