AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study tested an acceptance-based medication adherence intervention called AIM-AT for adults with early-stage psychosis, involving 126 participants from Hong Kong, randomly divided into three groups for comparison.
  • - Participants receiving AIM-AT showed significant improvements in medication adherence and understanding of their illness compared to those in conventional psychoeducation or usual treatment groups, measured at multiple follow-up points.
  • - Additional benefits for the AIM-AT group included reduced psychotic symptoms, improved social functioning, higher satisfaction with services, and fewer hospitalizations.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to test the effectiveness of an acceptance-based medication adherence intervention for people with early-stage psychosis. An assessor-blind, three-arm randomized controlled trial design was used. One hundred and twenty-six participants who were adults with ≤3 years of psychosis were recruited from four district Integrated Community Centers for Mental Wellness in Hong Kong. They were randomly assigned to receive a 10-session acceptance-based, insight-inducing medication adherence therapy (AIM-AT) intervention, a conventional psychoeducation group program, or usual treatment (n = 42 per group). Primary outcomes were medication adherence and insight into the illness/treatment. All study outcomes were measured at recruitment and immediately, 6 months, and 12 months post-intervention. Participants in the AIM-AT experienced statistically significant improvements in the primary outcomes (levels of medication adherence and insight into illness/treatment), when compared to those in the other two groups over the 12-month follow-ups. The AIM-AT group also had significantly greater improvements in psychotic symptoms, psychosocial functioning, service satisfaction, length of rehospitalization, and total number of patients hospitalized over the follow-up period. These findings support the effectiveness of the AIM-AT to improve medication adherence, psychosocial health, and service satisfaction in people with early-stage psychosis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2024.116046DOI Listing

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