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Pilot study to test the feasibility and clinical efficacy of a psychosocial care programme for patients with psychosis in low-resource settings.

Authors :
Sood, Mamta
Chadda, Rakesh K.
Singh, Pushpendra
Chawla, Nishtha
Patel, Rekha
Patil, Vaibhav
Padmavati, R.
Thara, Rangaswamy
Mohan, Mohapradeep
Iyer, Srividya
Shah, Jai
Madan, Jason
Birchwood, Max
Meyer, Caroline
Lilford, R.J.
Furtado, Vivek
Currie, Graeme
Singh, Swaran P.
Source :
Asian Journal of Psychiatry; Sep2024, Vol. 99, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Home-based psychosocial care has the potential to improving outcomes in patients with schizophrenia and related disorders (SCZ). There is lack of India data for such care in early psychosis. We developed the " Saksham " programme, a bespoke self-managed home-based psychosocial care model, available in two formats: manual-based and mobile-application based. With the anticipated success of recruitment of early psychosis cases in our setting, we plan to test the such intervention in this population in future trials. To assess the feasibility of the Saksham programme intervention in people with SCZ and its clinical efficacy as an adjunct to treatment as usual. Seventy-five patient-caregiver pairs (total n=150) were recruited. Patients received either: treatment-as-usual (TAU) (n=25), manual-based Saksham intervention+TAU (n=25), or app-based Saksham intervention+TAU (n=25). Feasibility (i.e. acceptability, practicality, demand, implementation and integration) was assessed at three-months. Participants were assessed for psychopathology, illness-severity, cognition, functioning, disability, and caregiver-coping at baseline, one-month, and three-month. The percentage changes over time were compared across three groups. More found the mobile application-based intervention acceptable and easy-to-use than the manual-based intervention (92 % vs 68 %, and 76 % vs 68 %, respectively). Psychopathology and caregiver-burden improved significantly in all three groups (p<0.05). Cognition, disability, functioning, and caregiver burden improved significantly in the two Saksham intervention groups, with greater improvement in the Saksham app group (p<0.05). Home-based intervention is feasible and acceptable in a low-resource setting, with preliminary evidence for effectiveness. These findings need corroboration with randomised controlled trials in early psychosis to ameliorate course of illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18762018
Volume :
99
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Asian Journal of Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180363931
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajp.2024.104120