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The clinical characterization of the patient with primary psychosis aimed at personalization of management

Authors :
Michael F. Green
Ruud van Winkel
Jouko Miettunen
Philip D. Harvey
Graham Thornicroft
Keith H. Nuechterlein
Marc De Hert
Dolores Malaspina
Silvana Galderisi
Jim van Os
Mario Maj
Victor Peralta
Patrick D. McGorry
Joseph Ventura
Peter B. Jones
Wolfgang Gaebel
Sinan Guloksuz
Robin M. Murray
Maj, M.
van Os, J.
De Hert, M.
Gaebel, W.
Galderisi, S.
Green, M. F.
Guloksuz, S.
Harvey, P. D.
Jones, P. B.
Malaspina, D.
Mcgorry, P.
Miettunen, J.
Murray, R. M.
Nuechterlein, K. H.
Peralta, V.
Thornicroft, G.
van Winkel, R.
Ventura, J.
RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health
MUMC+: MA Psychiatrie (3)
MUMC+: Hersen en Zenuw Centrum (3)
Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie
Source :
World Psychiatry, World Psychiatry, 20(1), 4-33. Wiley
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The current management of patients with primary psychosis worldwide is often remarkably stereotyped. In almost all cases an antipsychotic medica­tion is prescribed, with second-generation antipsychotics usually preferred to first-generation ones. Cognitive behavioral therapy is rarely used in the vast majority of countries, although there is evidence to support its efficacy. Psychosocial interventions are often provided, especially in chronic cases, but those applied are frequently not validated by research. Evidence-based family interventions and supported employment programs are seldom implemented in ordinary practice. Although the notion that patients with primary psychosis are at increased risk for cardiovascular diseases and diabetes mellitus is widely shared, it is not frequent that appropriate measures be implemented to address this problem. The view that the management of the patient with primary psychosis should be personalized is endorsed by the vast majority of clinicians, but this personalization is lacking or inadequate in most clinical contexts. Although many mental health services would declare themselves “recovery-oriented”, it is not common that a focus on empowerment, identity, meaning and resilience is ensured in ordinary practice. The present paper aims to address this situation. It describes systematically the salient domains that should be considered in the characterization of the individual patient with primary psychosis aimed at personalization of management. These include positive and negative symptom dimensions, other psychopathological components, onset and course, neurocognition and social cognition, neurodevelopmental indicators; social functioning, quality of life and unmet needs; clinical staging, antecedent and concomitant psychiatric conditions, physical comorbidities, family history, history of obstetric complications, early and recent environmental exposures, protective factors and resilience, and internalized stigma. For each domain, simple assessment instruments are identified that could be considered for use in clinical practice and included in standardized decision tools. A management of primary psychosis is encouraged which takes into account all the available treatment modalities whose efficacy is supported by research evidence, selects and modulates them in the individual patient on the basis of the clinical characterization, addresses the patient’s needs in terms of employment, housing, self-care, social relationships and education, and offers a focus on identity, meaning and resilience.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17238617
Volume :
20
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
World Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ecc36249e1e326f02984f09ebaf1a1d8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/wps.20809