AI Article Synopsis

  • Community care replaced institutional care for people with psychosis, but the lack of effective treatment guidelines has led to higher rates of criminal convictions among these individuals in Sweden and other countries.
  • Recent research highlights effective strategies to reduce aggressive and antisocial behavior (AABC) in patients with psychosis, emphasizing the importance of regular psychiatric support, specific medications, and abstinence from substances.
  • The failure to implement evidence-based practices hinders patients' ability to live independently and safely in the community, while also posing risks to public safety, underscoring the need for better assessment and intervention strategies.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Community care replaced institutional care for people with psychosis without guidance about what constituted effective treatment. In a Swedish birth cohort, many of those who developed schizophrenia or bipolar disorder as community care was being implemented were subsequently convicted of violent and non-violent crimes. Studies from other countries that were implementing community care at this time also reported elevated proportions of patients acquiring criminal convictions. Since community care was first implemented, much has been learned about factors that promote and treatments that limit aggressive/antisocial behaviour/criminality (AABC) among people with psychosis. Without the benefit of this knowledge, did mental health policy and practices that were in place as the asylums were closed inadvertently contribute to criminality?

Material And Methods: This article provides a narrative review of current evidence of effective treatments and management strategies to reduce AABC among patients with psychosis.

Results: Reductions in AABC are associated with stable contact with psychiatric services, second-generation antipsychotic medication, clozapine for patients with schizophrenia and elevated levels of hostility and/or a history of childhood conduct disorder, abstinence from substances, avoidance of trauma, and constant monitoring of both illness symptoms and AABC.

Conclusions: Failure to adopt evidence-based practices allows the problem of AABC to persist, prevents patients from experiencing independent, safe, community tenure, and puts those around them at risk. Many challenges remain, including implementing effective assessment and interventions at first-episode and convincing patients with antisocial attitudes and behaviours to participate in treatment programs to reduce AABC and to learn prosocial behaviours.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08039488.2024.2403586DOI Listing

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