A training model for relatives and friends in cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) informed care for psychosis

Relatives and close friends provide life-long support as informal carers to those living with psychosis. We introduce a model for training informal carers in cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) for psychosis, called Psychosis Recovery by Enabling Adult Carers at Home (Psychosis REACH). The model aims...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Douglas Turkington, Lina Gega, Latoyah Lebert, Maggie Douglas-Bailey, Nazneen Rustom, Mary Alberti, Sheila Deighton, Farooq Naeem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-12-01
Series:Cogent Psychology
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2018.1497749
Description
Summary:Relatives and close friends provide life-long support as informal carers to those living with psychosis. We introduce a model for training informal carers in cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) for psychosis, called Psychosis Recovery by Enabling Adult Carers at Home (Psychosis REACH). The model aims to address the carers’ own emotional needs and at the same time build their capabilities of promoting the recovery trajectory of the person they care for. We delivered two- and five-day workshops, underpinned by the Psychosis REACH model, to a cohort of 95 self-identified carers recruited via a charitable organisation in Canada. In a single-group before-and-after design, carers’ anxiety, depression and mental well-being significantly improved within a few days. A handful of carers who returned data for their cared-for-person after the end of training, observed either no change or a positive change in functioning. Our findings generated hypotheses that deserve further research to test whether training large groups of relatives and friends in CBT-informed care for psychosis can improve their anxiety, depression and mental well-being in the context of their caring role, as well as improve the functioning of those they care for.
ISSN:2331-1908