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This randomized controlled trial aimed to examine the effectiveness of a 10-session acceptance-based, insight-inducing medication adherence therapy (AIM-AT) program for recent-onset psychosis (in addition to usual care) over a 12-month follow-up (i.e., at immediate, 6-month, and 12-month post-intervention).
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Objectives: To evaluate the effectiveness of an Acceptance-based, Insight-inducing Medication Adherence Therapy (AIM_ AT) for recent-onset psychosis on patient outcomes over 12-month follow-up, when compared with a standardized psychoeducation group and routine care only.
Focus-group interviews will be performed on purposively selected participants to examine perceived benefits, satisfaction and limitations of the AIM_ AT.
Hypotheses: Compared with psychoeducation group and routine care only, the AIM_AT participants will indicate significantly greater improvements in patients' adherence to anti-psychotic medication and illness/treatment insight and other secondary outcomes (symptom severity, drug attitude, progress of recovery, psychosocial functioning, satisfaction with service, and re-hospitalization rate) at immediate post-intervention, and/or greater improvements in the above outcomes at 6- and 12-month follow-ups.
Design: A multi-center RCT with repeated-measures, three-arm design. Subjects: 126 Chinese patients with recent-onset psychosis ( </= 5 years) randomly selected from four Integrated Community Centers for Mental Wellness and randomly assigned into three study groups.
Instruments/outcome measures: Frequency, length of re-hospitalizations, and total number of patients being hospitalized from clinic records over 5-6 months; valid questionnaires (ARS, ITAQ, DAI, QPR, PANSS, SLOF, CSQ-8) for medication adherence, illness/treatment insight, drug attitude, recovery, symptom severity, functioning, and service satisfaction accordingly. Focus group interviews will collect views on benefits and weaknesses of the AIM_AT.
Data analysis: Comparing the mean value changes of outcomes between groups across time on intention-to-treat basis, using Mixed Modeling/GEE-test; and content analysis of data from focus-group interviews and intervention sessions will be conducted.
Expected results: The findings can provide evidence of the effectiveness of AIM_ AT for early-stage psychosis in community mental healthcare on improving patients' medication adherence, mental condition and recovery, functioning, and service satisfaction.
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126 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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