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1.
Arch Psychiatr Nurs ; 37: 61-68, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35337440

ABSTRACT

Family-based caregivers of psychiatric patients are the backbone of the healthcare system and are, in fact, generally considered as patients themselves. Their commitment and obligation to take care of the in-need and disabled patients in the family can lead to their psychological destruction. This paper attempts to investigate the effects of post-discharge care for patients with severe psychiatric illnesses on the burnout of their caregivers in the Qods Hospital of Sanandaj. This before-after study was performed on 72 subjects divided into two groups of 36, all of whom were chosen from the caregivers of the case and control subjects from family members of the psychiatric patients discharged from Qods psychiatric hospital in 2016. The study was effectively conducted with a control group design. The case group included patients who received home-care services after being discharged, and the caregiver group received nothing but regular care. First, using the hospital files, personal characteristics and diagnosis of the patient were recorded, thus the caregivers' characteristics and their burnout and psychological exhaustion severity were collected by caregiver burden inventory. The data were presented using descriptive-analytic indexes. The results represented that most of the caregivers (95.8%) suffered from moderate to severe burdens at the time of discharge. In using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, pre-test scores in two groups supported the normal hypotheses of the data (P = 0.55). Also, the level of significance in the covariance test showed the efficacy of intervention after the test (P = 0.000). In this study, most of the patients' caregivers with severe mental illnesses suffered from moderate to a severe burden, which, of course, seems to be more than other similar studies. Differences in social, cultural, and special regional conditions, as well as the type of applied questionnaire, were of significance. However, despite the mentioned difference, as it is true for other similar studies in Iran and other countries, home-care services have a significant effect on reducing the caregivers' burden after one year. Researches could, besides reducing the burnout of caregivers, provide a model which could help patients in the deprived areas without removing cultural and family roots and without diminishing the role of the family.


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Mental Disorders , Aftercare , Burnout, Psychological , Caregiver Burden , Caregivers/psychology , Humans , Mental Disorders/therapy , Patient Discharge
2.
Behav Modif ; 46(3): 553-580, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33356487

ABSTRACT

This study compared the effects of adding acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) or exposure and response prevention (ERP) to adults diagnosed with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) already on an optimal and stable dose of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Forty adults on SSRIs who were diagnosed with OCD participated in a randomized controlled trial in Iran of 12 individual weekly sessions of either ACT+SSRI, ERP+SSRI, or continued SSRI only. The results showed significant reductions in OCD symptom severity in ACT+SSRI and ERP+SSRI conditions at posttreatment with significantly greater reductions in both conditions compared to SSRI-only at follow-up. Additionally, psychological inflexibility and use of thought control strategies significantly decreased in the ACT+SSRI condition at posttreatment and follow-up compared to the ERP+SSRI and SSRI conditions. Both conditions led to decreases in perceived importance of stop signals. Results provide cross-cultural support for the treatment of OCD using ACT and ERP as adjuncts to SSRI and modest process of change differences between ACT and ERP. Future directions and study limitations are discussed.


Subject(s)
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy , Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder , Adult , Humans , Iran , Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder/therapy , Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Treatment Outcome
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