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Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association ; : 1223-1233, 1999.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-91651

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Schizophrenic patients having a disturbance of cognition and emotion are least likely to identify emotional (especially negative) stimuli and cue in tense background stimuli. Also, schizophreinic patients tend to experience relapse if they are exposued to a situation which is emotionally laden. Although emotion itself is important, emotional processing has not been a therapeutic target and skill trainig which improves social competence has provided patients with emotional load. Therefore, we introduced Emotional Management Trainig (EMT) which deal with indirect and direct emotional processing, applied it to schizophrenic patients, and investigated the therapeutic effects. METHODS: We applied the Emotional Management Training (EMT) to 30 schizophrenic patients for 12 weeks, 2 times every week and psychoeducation to 23 schizophrenic patients as control group attention-placebo for 12 weeks, during the same period. Before and after treatment, we used the Trait Meta Mood Scale-short form (TMMS-S) as emotional proper, Social Perception Scale, Verbal Fluency Test, Verbal Paired Associates, and Similarities for cognitive functions. We also used Positive And Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) as psychopathology measurement and Social Problem Solving Scale (SPSI) as various kinds of social problem solving function measurement before and after treatment. RESULTS: The results showed that EMT group appeared to be more effective in improving the visual perception of social perception scale, verbal fluencies, positive symptoms, general psychopathology, and total score in PANSS than the control group. Also EMT group seemed to be more effective in total score and Problem Orientation score in SPSI than the control. But there were no differences in abstract function and verbal memory, negative symptoms, and Problem-Solving Skill score between the two groups. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that despite the limitations of the generalizability and the questions for the persistence of effectiveness, EMT might help schizophrenics get the motivational aspects, the familiarity with emotional-loaded situation, and initial processes, for social problem-solving.


Subject(s)
Humans , Cognition , Cues , Memory , Mental Competency , Psychopathology , Recognition, Psychology , Recurrence , Schizophrenia , Social Perception , Social Problems , Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation , Visual Perception
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