Supportive psychodynamic psychotherapy versus treatment as usual for first-episode psychosis: two-year outcome

Bent Rosenbaum, Susanne Harder, Per Knudsen, Matilde Lajer, Anne Lindhardt, Kristian Valbak, Gerda Winther

    59 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    During recent decades, the field of treatment of schizophrenia has lacked empirical, systematic outcome studies that support psychodynamic psychotherapy as an evidence-based intervention for patients with schizophrenia. The Danish schizophrenia project (DNS) compared psychodynamic psychotherapy for psychosis with standard treatment in patients with a first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorder. The study was designed as a prospective, comparative, longitudinal multi-site investigation of consecutively referred patients who were included during two years. The patients were treated with either manualized individual supportive psychodynamic psychotherapy (SPP) in addition to treatment as usual or with treatment as usual alone (TaU). Symptoms and functional outcomes were measured using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) and the Global Assessment of Functioning scale (GAF). The study included 269 consecutively admitted patients, age 18-35, of whom 79% remained in the study after two years. The intervention group improved significantly on measures of both PANSS and GAF scores, with large effect sizes at two years follow-up after inclusion. Further, improvement on GAFfunction (p = 0.000) and GAFsymptom (p = 0.010) significantly favored SPP in combination with TaU over TaU alone. In spite of limitations, this study speaks in favor of including supportive psychodynamic psychotherapy in the treatment for patients with schizophrenic first-episode psychoses.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalPsychiatry
    Volume75
    Issue number4
    Pages (from-to)331-341
    Number of pages11
    ISSN0033-2747
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Dec 2012

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