Psychoeducation An Effective Tool As Treatment Modality in Mental Health
Psychoeducation An Effective Tool As Treatment Modality in Mental Health
Psychoeducation An Effective Tool As Treatment Modality in Mental Health
net/publication/318461551
CITATIONS READS
21 30,421
2 authors:
Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects:
All content following this page was uploaded by Rishi Panday on 17 July 2017.
ABSTRACT
Psychoeducation is an adjunctive approach which has the immense potentialities to reduce the
relapse as well as rehospitalization rates and mental health costs in relapsing psychiatric
disorders. Psychoeducation is understood as systematic, structured, didactic information on the
illness and its treatment options and psychoeducation aims to enable patients as well as family
members to cope with the illness. This paper shows that how psycho education is an effective
tool as treatment modality in mental health. Psycho education has very important place in
treatment and rehabilitation of patients with psychiatric disorders. Psychoeducation give
directions to individuals with mental disorders and their family member about nature, course and
prognosis about illness.
1
Psychiatric Social Worker, CDC, Dept. of Pediatrics, MAMC and Ph.D Scholar, Dept. of Social Work, Jamia
Millia Islamia, New Delhi, India
2
Ph.D Scholar, Dept. of Social Work, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi, India
*Responding Author
© 2016 Srivastava P, Panday R; licensee IJIP. This is an Open Access Research distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted
use, distribution, and reproduction in any Medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Psychoeducation an Effective Tool as Treatment Modality in Mental Health
psychotherapeutic intervention, designed to inform patients and their relatives about the disorder
and to promote coping” (Lincoln et al., 2007). By strengthening the coping skills,
communication and problem solving abilities of the family, the well-being and adaptability of the
individual and family members are expected to improve.
Psychoeducation is the “process of teaching clients with mental illness and their family members
about the nature of the illness, including its aetiology, progression, consequences, prognosis,
treatment and alternatives” (Barker, 2003).
© The International Journal of Indian Psychology, ISSN 2348-5396 (e)| ISSN: 2349-3429 (p) | 124
Psychoeducation an Effective Tool as Treatment Modality in Mental Health
• Aetiology, factors (precipitating, predisposing and perpetuating) associated with the course
and outcome of various mental disorders
• Signs and symptoms of mental disorders
• Explaining early signs of warning/triggering factors of relapses
• Guidance for the introspection and appropriate perception of typical symptoms of the
problem
• How to act as a responsible person/how cope with the situation?
• When and whom to seek treatment?
• Dos and don’ts to family members while handling patient at home
• Dispelling off stigma, prejudices, misconception and negative attitudes to mental illness and
patients
© The International Journal of Indian Psychology, ISSN 2348-5396 (e)| ISSN: 2349-3429 (p) | 125
Psychoeducation an Effective Tool as Treatment Modality in Mental Health
The skill training model: this model is directed at systematically developing specific
behaviours so that family members can enhance their capability to assist the ill relatives
and manage the illness more effectively.
The supportive model: it is an approach which generally utilizes support groups designed to
engage the families of patient in sharing their feelings and experiences. Here the main goal
is to enhance and improve the emotional capacities of the families to cope with the burden
of caring for their ill relatives.
Comprehensive model: it is also called combination approach because it consists of
information, skill training and supportive model. In the initial phase of this approach
members are given lectures about the illness. They are to take part in multi-family support
group. In the final phase they have to participate particularly as a member of individual
sessions with a mental health professional. (Left et al., 1992)
Family psychoeducation programs have been studied extensively and refined by a number of
researchers, including Ian R.H. Falloon, Gerald Hogarty, William McFarlane, and Lisa Dixon.
William McFarlane proposed a model of psychoeducation namely ‘Multiple Family Group
Therapy’ (MFGT) with the aims of engaging families in the rehabilitation and after care
programmes of severe psychiatric illness like schizophrenia. This model acknowledges the
essentially chronic nature of this disease and seeks to engage families in the rehabilitation
process by creating a long-term working partnership with them and providing them with the
information needed to understand schizophrenia. This model seeks to assist the patient and
family in accommodating the disease while developing social support systems for the reduction
of confusing, anxiety, and exhaustion in the patient's family, while they learn adaptive strategies.
William McFarlane delivered following assumptions of this model: Schizophrenia and schizo-
affective disorders have strong biological correlates which point to the brain in the illness. This
involvement can best be understood as a deficit in the attention-arousal mechanisms of the brain,
yielding a condition whereby stimuli are idiosyncratically handled, Ordinary life events, and
certainly extraordinary ones, can produce stress which overwhelms the patient's ability to
respond in a directed and adaptive manner to a wide variety of stimuli, precipitating a psychotic
episode, Schizophrenia is a chronic disease which is characterized by recurring episodes which
each may last up to two years (including both positive and negative symptom phases), Families
do not cause schizophrenia although they may inadvertently exacerbate the condition in their
efforts to respond to it, The preferred response to the presence of schizophrenia is usually not
deductible from "common sense" and may be in opposition to standard treatments for other
mental disorders, Anti-psychotic and other psychotropic medications are generally of use in
controlling symptoms although they are usually not sufficient in themselves to bring about
complete rehabilitation, The use of street drugs or alcohol tends to exacerbate symptoms of
schizophrenia, Clinicians who are warm, collegial, and non-blaming of families have the best
chance of helping them learn new ways of responding to this illness, Clinicians need active
support and supervision by more senior clinicians in their efforts to put this model into practice.
© The International Journal of Indian Psychology, ISSN 2348-5396 (e)| ISSN: 2349-3429 (p) | 126
Psychoeducation an Effective Tool as Treatment Modality in Mental Health
Short term goal directed psychoeducational programme is also developed in recent years.
Researcher s had shown that this short term psychoeducational programme can be as beneficial
as long term programmes. Bauml et al. (2006) showed that this brief, eight-session
psychoeducation program may also have long-term effects like long term programme. They
found statistically significant and clinically important differences between the persons who had
received it and who hadn’t. Their research was the part of the 7-year follow-up of the Psychosis
Information Project Study (PIP-study). In this study separate groups for patients and their
families were exmined. In Japan Yamaguchi et al (2006) postulated a short time goal directed
psychoeducative intervention for the families with severely ill schizophrenia affected patients.
Their therapy could be given in a period of 2 months and at the time of intervention the key
relatives are to participate in three or four sessions of psychoeducation. Each session should last
© The International Journal of Indian Psychology, ISSN 2348-5396 (e)| ISSN: 2349-3429 (p) | 127
Psychoeducation an Effective Tool as Treatment Modality in Mental Health
for 2 hours and consist of two to six participants. The sessions are to be led by two or three
doctors, a nurse and a social worker. These sessions of this approach should include interactive
lectures on information about schizophrenia, rehabilitation, social support programs, and
management of patient behaviors which should be followed by an intensive discussion, taking
advantage of the small size of the groups. Authors claimed that after the intervention, both state
and trait anxieties, subjective burden, sense of distress and depression of the relatives should
come down at the significant level.
Pollio et al (2006) developed a format of composed but time limited single day psycho-education
programme for relatives of patients with severe mental illnesses like schizophrenia, bipolar
disorder, major depression, and other affective disorders. They had tested this approach of
psychoeducation on few relatives of those patients. For that reason they organized a workshop
for these people and saw the results. This 1-day psychoeducation workshop contains three
lectures (descriptive and diagnostic information on schizophrenia and mood disorders, biological
basis of mental illness, including neurochemistry and genetics, and medication and other
treatment options). Informal discussion between the therapist and participants was organized
during the lunch break of the work shop. After that two breakout sessions with a brief didactic
presentation on following areas like ‘area resources’, ‘success stories’, ‘ask the doc’, ‘religion’,
and ‘legal rights’ took place. They evaluated that short-term goals of the workshops were
achieved satisfactorily. Expected positive goals of the workshop were ‘control of daily life’,
‘effectiveness in crisis situation’, ‘knowledge on obtaining community resources’, and
‘knowledge about mental illness and treatment’ and those things were significantly increased,
whereas ‘feelings of guilt’ decreased. Authors opined that families with such patients would reap
the fruits of this intervention in satisfactory manner.
© The International Journal of Indian Psychology, ISSN 2348-5396 (e)| ISSN: 2349-3429 (p) | 128
Psychoeducation an Effective Tool as Treatment Modality in Mental Health
CONCLUSION
The psychoeducation has been appeared as a major therapeutic approach to enable patients and
their caregivers more skilful in dealing with the manifold stress being caused by psychiatric
disorders. Psycho education has very important place in treatment and rehabilitation of patients
with psychiatric disorders Over time, when individuals with serious mental illness and their
families learn more about the illness and ways to reduce its effects, there can be many positive
changes, such as: Fewer relapses, Less time spending in the psychiatric hospital, Decreased sense
of stigma, Feeling of better control over life, Better medication adherence, Having better social
living and problem solving skills among patients, Better global family functioning, Less
occurrences of depression and anxiety among caregivers.
Acknowledgments
The author appreciates all those who participated in the study and helped to facilitate the
research process.
Conflict of Interests
The author declared no conflict of interests.
REFERENCES
Bauml J, Pitschel-Walz G. Psychoedukation bei schizophrenen Erkrankungen. Stuttgart,
Germany: Schattauer; 2003. Article in German. As cited in: J Ba¨uml, T Frobo¨se, S
Kraemer, M Rentrop, and G Pitschel-Walz (2006). Psychoeducation: A basic
psychotherapeutic intervention for patients with schizophrenia and their families.
Schizophrenia Bulletin, 32(1), S1-S9.
Bauml, J., Frobose, T., Kraemer, S., Rentrop, M. and Pitschel-Walz, G. (2006).
Psychoeducation: A basic psychotherapeutic intervention for patients with schizophrenia
and their families. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 32(1), S1-S9.
Bäumlet, Josef, et al. Psychoeducation: A Basic Psychotherapeutic Intervention for Patients with
Schizophrenia and Their Families. Schizophrenia Bulletin. 2006 32 (Supplement 1): S1-S9.
Donker, T., Griffits, K.M., Cuijpers, P., Christensen, H. (2009). Psychoeducation for depression,
anxiety and psychological distress: A meta-analysis. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
and Mental Health, 7:79.
Hogarty, G.E.; Anderson, CM.; Reiss, D.J.; Kornblith, S.J.; Greenwald, D.P.; Ulrich, R.F.; and
Carter, M. (1991). Family psychoeducation, social skills training, and maintenance
chemotherapy in the aftercare treatment of schizophrenia: II. Two-year effects of a
controlled study on relapse and adjustment. Archives of General Psychiatry, 48, 340-347.
Leff, J.; Kuipers, L.; Berkowitz, R.; Eberlein-Vries, R.; and Sturgeon, D. (1992). A controlled
trial of social intervention in the families of schizophrenic patients. British Journal of
Psychiatry, 141, 121–134.
© The International Journal of Indian Psychology, ISSN 2348-5396 (e)| ISSN: 2349-3429 (p) | 129
Psychoeducation an Effective Tool as Treatment Modality in Mental Health
Lincoln, T.M., Wilhelm, K., Nestoriuc, Y. (2007). Effectiveness of psychoeducation for relapse,
symptoms, knowledge, adherence and functioning in psychotic disorders: A meta-
analysis. Schizophrenia Research, 96 (1-3), 232-245.
Pollio, D.E., North, C.S., Reid, D.L/, et al. (2006). Living with severe mental illness: What
families and friends must know: Evaluation of a one-day psychoeducation workshop.
Social Work, 51, 31–38. As cited in: C Rummel-Kluge & W Kissling (2008).
Psychoeducation in schizophrenia: New developments and approaches in the field.
Current Opinion in Psychiatry, 21, 168–172.
Rummel, C.B., Hansen, W., Helbig, A., Pitschel-Walz, G., Kissling, W. (2005). Peer-to-peer
psychoeducation in schizophrenia: a new approach. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 66,
1580-1585.
Solomon, P. (1996). Moving from psychoeducation for families of adults with serious mental
illness. Psychiatric Services, 47 (12), 1364-1370.
Yamaguchi, H., Takahashi, A., Takano, A., Kojima, T. (2006). Direct effects of short-term
psychoeducational intervention for relatives of patients with schizophrenia in Japan.
Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 60, 590–597. As cited in: C Rummel-Kluge & W
Kissling (2008). Psychoeducation in schizophrenia: New developments and approaches
in the field. Current Opinion in Psychiatry, 21, 168–172.
How to cite this article: Srivastava P, Panday R (2016), Psychoeducation an Effective Tool as
Treatment Modality in Mental Health, International Journal of Indian Psychology, Volume 4,
Issue 1, No. 82, ISSN:2348-5396 (e), ISSN:2349-3429 (p), DIP:18.01.153/20160401, ISBN:978-
1-365-59365-9
© The International Journal of Indian Psychology, ISSN 2348-5396 (e)| ISSN: 2349-3429 (p) | 130