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Title: Longitudinal analysis of statistical and clinically significant psychosocial change following mental health rehabilitation. Author: Maxwell A, Tsoutsoulis K, Menon Tarur Padinjareveettil A, Zivkovic F, Rogers JM. Journal: Disabil Rehabil; 2019 Dec; 41(24):2927-2939. PubMed ID: 29978733. Abstract: Purpose: With appropriate mental health rehabilitation, schizophrenia is increasingly associated with reports of recovery and stability. However, there is little empirical evidence evaluating the efficacy of services delivering this care. This study evaluated the effectiveness of rehabilitation for improving psychosocial function in consumers with schizophrenia.Methods: An electronic database of standardized assessment instruments mandated and maintained by the health service was retrospectively reviewed to extract ratings of psychosocial function, daily living skills, and mood state from consecutive admissions to an inpatient rehabilitation service. Outcomes were compared at admission, discharge, and one-year follow-up to identify statistically significant change. Individual reliable and clinically significant change was also assessed by comparison with a normative group of clients functioning independently in the community.Results: From admission to discharge the rehabilitation group made statistically significant gains in psychosocial function and daily living skills. Improvements were reliable and clinically significant in one-quarter to one-third of individual consumers. Approximately half sustained their improvements at follow-up, although this represented only a small fraction of the overall cohort. Consumers not demonstrating gains exhibited psychometric floor effects at admission.Conclusions: Rehabilitation can produce statistically and clinically significant immediate improvement in psychosocial function for a sub-set of consumers with elevated scores at admission. The durability of any gains is less clear, and strategies promoting longer-term maintenance are encouraged. Furthermore, currently mandated outcome measures are confounded by issues of sensitivity and reporting compliance, and exploration of alternative instruments for assessing recovery is recommended.Implications for RehabilitationRoutinely collected standardized outcome measures can be used to investigate the effectiveness of mental health rehabilitationIn addition to statistical significance, the clinical significance of outcomes should be evaluated to identify change that is individually meaningfulCurrently mandated outcomes instruments do not adequately evaluate many individuals' recovery journeyMental health service evaluation and quality improvement processes would likely benefit from adoption of recovery-oriented measures.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]