Background Interventions to reduce treatment delay in first-episode psychosis have met with mixed results. Systematic reviews highlight the need for greater understanding of delays within the care pathway if successful strategies are to be developed. Aims To document the care-pathway components of duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) and their link with delays in accessing specialised early intervention services (EIS). To model the likely impact on efforts to reduce DUP of targeted changes in the care pathway. Method Data for 343 individuals from the Birmingham, UK, lead site of the National EDEN cohort study were analysed. Results A third of the cohort had a DUP exceeding 6 months. The greatest contribution to DUP for...
BACKGROUND: No evidence based approach to reduce duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) has been effe...
Purpose: Delay in the treatment of a first psychotic episode can have a negative influence on the fu...
Background: Reducing treatment delay and coercive pathways to care are accepted aims for Early In...
Objective An extensive international literature demonstrates that understanding pathways to care (PT...
A longer duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) as well as of untreated illness (DUI) was found to be...
PART I. MEASURING PATHWAYS TO CARE IN FIRST-EPISODE PSYCHOSIS: THE STEP PATHWAYS TO CARE SCALE Reduc...
This study aimed to examine the pathways to care and the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) in fi...
Substantial amount of time is lost before initiation of treatment in Schizophrenia. The delay in tre...
Objective This study aimed to determine if the inception of Early Intervention Services (EISs) is...
Reducing treatment delay and coercive pathways to care are accepted aims for Early Intervention Serv...
Objective This study aimed to determine if the inception of Early Intervention Services (EISs) is f...
Background No evidence based approach to reduce duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) has been ef...
Reduction of duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) is the key strategy of early interventions for im...
BACKGROUND: Substantial amount of time is lost before initiation of treatment in Schizophrenia. The ...
PURPOSE: To describe pathways to care, duration of untreated psychosis (DUP), and types of interven...
BACKGROUND: No evidence based approach to reduce duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) has been effe...
Purpose: Delay in the treatment of a first psychotic episode can have a negative influence on the fu...
Background: Reducing treatment delay and coercive pathways to care are accepted aims for Early In...
Objective An extensive international literature demonstrates that understanding pathways to care (PT...
A longer duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) as well as of untreated illness (DUI) was found to be...
PART I. MEASURING PATHWAYS TO CARE IN FIRST-EPISODE PSYCHOSIS: THE STEP PATHWAYS TO CARE SCALE Reduc...
This study aimed to examine the pathways to care and the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) in fi...
Substantial amount of time is lost before initiation of treatment in Schizophrenia. The delay in tre...
Objective This study aimed to determine if the inception of Early Intervention Services (EISs) is...
Reducing treatment delay and coercive pathways to care are accepted aims for Early Intervention Serv...
Objective This study aimed to determine if the inception of Early Intervention Services (EISs) is f...
Background No evidence based approach to reduce duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) has been ef...
Reduction of duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) is the key strategy of early interventions for im...
BACKGROUND: Substantial amount of time is lost before initiation of treatment in Schizophrenia. The ...
PURPOSE: To describe pathways to care, duration of untreated psychosis (DUP), and types of interven...
BACKGROUND: No evidence based approach to reduce duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) has been effe...
Purpose: Delay in the treatment of a first psychotic episode can have a negative influence on the fu...
Background: Reducing treatment delay and coercive pathways to care are accepted aims for Early In...