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Reduced social and community functioning is a predominant and enduring feature in people experiencing severe mental illness such as psychosis. The large majority of interventions (mostly pharmacological) target the so called positive symptoms (e.g. hallucinations and delusions) but poorly address functional and social consequences of the illness.
This study attempts to fill this gap by assessing the feasibility and acceptability of a psychological intervention targeting social cognition deficit in people with psychosis. The intervention is a group psychological treatment facilitated by a clinical psychologist targeting competencies such as emotion recognition, social situation appraisal and guessing people's intentions and mental states. The group therapy takes advantage of audiovisual material to illustrate strategies and thinking styles that may help participants to overcome difficulties in social settings.
A second objective of this study is to test a new method to measure social cognition. Recent research showed that interview and performance based tests are poorly associated with every day activity of people with schizophrenia. This study is planning to evaluate the feasibility of new assessment methods for social cognition in everyday life using portable electronic devices (Experience Sampling Method and an activity watch). These devices will be carried by participants in their everyday life and will ask about feelings and levels of social activities at random times and record basic physiological and activity levels.
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Inclusion criteria
Diagnosis part of the psychosis spectrum (according to DSM-IV or DSM-V or ICD-10); age 18-65 yrs; good command of the English language; social engagement problems as evidenced by care coordinator report and number of hours spent in social activities per week lower than 10.
Exclusion criteria
Primary diagnosis of substance abuse disorder; change in antipsychotic medication in the last six weeks; significant learning difficulties (premorbid IQ lower than 70).
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48 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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