严重精神疾病“难出院”住院患者的认知特征:归因偏差与怀疑仅在内省水平较低的患者中存在关联

Hayden C. Bottoms, E. Treichler, C. Davidson, W. Spaulding
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引用次数: 2

摘要

尽管在精神康复(PR)方面取得了进展,但仍有相当数量的严重精神疾病(SMI)患者被长期安置在精神病院。这些个体的认知特征在他们的制度化状态中起着作用。考虑到个体认知特征,包括“归因偏差”和对自身疾病的洞察,PR在改善病例概念化和治疗计划方面受益。洞察或理解一个人的疾病,涉及到对自己的行为和经历的原因的归因,包括精神症状。此外,归因偏见可能会对这种理解产生负面影响,从而影响康复的参与。本探索性研究分析了归因偏差、对疾病的理解和精神症状的定量个体差异,以确定这些功能域如何在“难以出院”的重度精神障碍患者中相互作用。结果显示,积极的积极症状、夸大的外化归因偏见(将积极事件的原因归因于他人)和对疾病的理解之间存在相互作用。在对疾病理解较差的个体中,归因偏见与高度猜疑有关。然而,在对疾病有更好理解的个体中,归因偏见和怀疑并不相关。归因偏差、阳性症状和对疾病的理解之间的动态关系揭示了SMI中洞察力的可变性质,并支持在病例概念化、个体化治疗计划和开发以认知为重点的PR治疗模式中利用这些认知特征。
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Cognitive Characteristics in “Difficult-to-Discharge” Inpatients with Serious Mental Illness: Attribution Biases are Associated with Suspiciousness Only for Those with Lower Levels of Insight
Despite advances in psychiatric rehabilitation (PR), a substantial number of individuals with serious mental illness (SMI) are institutionalized for extended periods. The cognitive characteristics of these individuals play a role in their institutionalized status. Consideration of individual cognitive characteristics, including “attribution biases” and insight into one's illness, has benefited PR in improving case conceptualization and treatment planning. Insight, or understanding one's illness, involves attributions about the causes of one's own behavior and experience, including psychiatric symptoms. Further, attribution biases may have a negative impact on such understanding, and consequently on engagement in rehabilitation. This exploratory study analyzed quantitative individual differences in attribution bias, understanding of illness, and psychiatric symptoms, to determine how these functional domains interact in people with SMI who are “difficult to discharge.” The results reveal an interaction between active positive symptoms, exaggerated externalizing attribution bias (attributing the cause of positive events to others), and understanding of illness. Among individuals with more impaired understanding of illness, attribution biases are associated with high levels of suspiciousness. However, among individuals with better understanding of illness, attribution biases and suspiciousness are not related. The dynamic relationship between attribution bias, positive symptoms, and understanding of illness sheds light on the variable nature of insight in SMI and supports utilizing these cognitive characteristics in case conceptualization, individualized treatment plans, and developing cognitively focused PR treatment modalities.
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