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Family expressed emotion prior to onset of psychosis
Authors:McFarlane William R  Cook William L
Institution:University of Vermont, Center for Psychiatric Research, Maine Medical Center 22 Bramhall Street, Portland, ME 04102, USA. mcfarw@mmc.org
Abstract:This study compared components of expressed emotion (EE; rejection, warmth, protectiveness, and fusion) across three samples: two in which the subjects had an established schizophrenic or mood disorder, and a third in which the subjects were at high risk for an initial psychosis. METHODS: Family members rated themselves on the Social Adjustment Scale-III and, in the prodromal sample, estimated the duration of the prodrome. RESULTS: Scores were all but identical in the two established-disorder samples but were markedly higher than scores in the prodromal sample on all four factors. In mothers, warmth (decreasing), rejection, protectiveness, and fusion (increasing) were significantly correlated with duration of prodrome, whereas for fathers, warmth and protectiveness were similarly correlated. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that expressed emotion is largely reactive to deterioration manifested by the young person developing a psychotic disorder, rather than a trait of family members.
Keywords:Expressed Emotion  Psychosis  Prodromal Phase  Family Rejection  Schizophrenia
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