Background: The role of antipsychotic medication in supporting young people in their recovery from early psychosis is complex and controversial. It is common for young people, often given antipsychotic medication for the first time, to express a choice to stop treatment, potentially increasing the risk of relapse and admission to hospital. Our systematic review aimed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of psychosocial interventions to enhance antipsychotic medication adherence in young people with early psychosis. Methods: We reviewed studies using any experimental design of psychosocial interventions specifically focused on enhancing adherence with antipsychotic medication in young people with early psychosis. Cochrane CENTRAL Registe...
This triple-blind (participants, clinicians, and researchers) randomized controlled noninferiority t...
Accessible summary Delays in effective treatment of a first episode psychosis can result in more se...
INTRODUCTION: One in a hundred people will develop schizophrenia; about 75% of people have relapses ...
Background: Antipsychotic medication is given in first episode psychosis in a prophylactic sense and...
AIM: It is now necessary to investigate whether recovery in psychosis is possible without the use of...
Background: Psychotic disorders are associated with a high degree of impairment making early interve...
Purpose of review: We aimed to review literature on the efficacy and tolerability of psychosocial an...
Adherence to antipsychotics improves outcome in schizophrenia. There is a lack of consensus on which...
BackgroundEarly intervention services for psychosis aim to detect emergent symptoms, reduce the dura...
Background: Evidence for the effectiveness of treatments in early-onset psychosis is sparse. Current...
Background: Evidence for the effectiveness of treatments in early-onset psychosis is sparse. Current...
BACKGROUND: Evidence for the effectiveness of treatments in early-onset psychosis is sparse. Current...
Background: Evidence for the effectiveness of treatments in early-onset psychosis is sparse. Current...
Background: Psychotic disorders are commonly accompanied by intense psychological burden, and psycho...
Background: Indicated primary prevention in young people at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis (CHR-P)...
This triple-blind (participants, clinicians, and researchers) randomized controlled noninferiority t...
Accessible summary Delays in effective treatment of a first episode psychosis can result in more se...
INTRODUCTION: One in a hundred people will develop schizophrenia; about 75% of people have relapses ...
Background: Antipsychotic medication is given in first episode psychosis in a prophylactic sense and...
AIM: It is now necessary to investigate whether recovery in psychosis is possible without the use of...
Background: Psychotic disorders are associated with a high degree of impairment making early interve...
Purpose of review: We aimed to review literature on the efficacy and tolerability of psychosocial an...
Adherence to antipsychotics improves outcome in schizophrenia. There is a lack of consensus on which...
BackgroundEarly intervention services for psychosis aim to detect emergent symptoms, reduce the dura...
Background: Evidence for the effectiveness of treatments in early-onset psychosis is sparse. Current...
Background: Evidence for the effectiveness of treatments in early-onset psychosis is sparse. Current...
BACKGROUND: Evidence for the effectiveness of treatments in early-onset psychosis is sparse. Current...
Background: Evidence for the effectiveness of treatments in early-onset psychosis is sparse. Current...
Background: Psychotic disorders are commonly accompanied by intense psychological burden, and psycho...
Background: Indicated primary prevention in young people at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis (CHR-P)...
This triple-blind (participants, clinicians, and researchers) randomized controlled noninferiority t...
Accessible summary Delays in effective treatment of a first episode psychosis can result in more se...
INTRODUCTION: One in a hundred people will develop schizophrenia; about 75% of people have relapses ...