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Randomized Controlled Trial of Treatment for Internalized Stigma in Schizophrenia
The purpose of the present study is to build upon the investigators' previous exploratory intervention development study by conducting an adequately-powered, randomized controlled trial of the Narrative Enhancement/Cognitive Therapy (NECT) intervention among persons with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders.
Internalized (or self) stigma develops when people with mental illness become aware of stigmatizing attitudes held by many in society about mental illness (e.g., dangerousness, incompetence, inability to work), perceive these attitudes as being legitimate, and apply them to themselves. There is substantial evidence that internalized stigma is strongly negatively linked to both the objective (e.g., social functioning) and subjective (e.g., self-esteem and well-being) components of recovery for persons with schizophrenia, and that these effects operate independent of symptom-related disability. Nevertheless, few efforts have been made to develop treatment to address this issue. Previously, the investigators were funded to develop a group-based intervention (R34MH082161) combining cognitive-behavioral therapy and narrative psychotherapy to address internalized stigma among people with severe mental illness. The purpose of the present study is to build upon the investigators' previous exploratory intervention development study by conducting an adequately-powered, randomized controlled trial of the Narrative Enhancement/Cognitive Therapy (NECT) intervention among persons with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. The investigators will screen 500 persons at two sites (Newark, New Jersey and Indianapolis, IN) for evidence of moderate or elevated internalized stigma. They will conduct a randomized study of NECT versus supportive group therapy in a sample of 175 individuals meeting Structured Clinical Interview criteria for schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. Randomization will be stratified by baseline self-stigma severity (moderate or elevated), to ensure roughly equal numbers of participants for each stratum. Participants will complete baseline, post-treatment, 3-month post treatment and 6-month post treatment assessments of internalized stigma, psychiatric symptoms, insight, self-esteem, hopelessness, coping, narrative coherence and social functioning. The specific aims of the project are: 1) Conduct a randomized study of the effectiveness of NECT, comparing outcomes for 175 persons with schizophrenia-spectrum disorder randomly assigned to NECT or supportive group therapy, 2) Examine the mediating impact of changes in narrative coherence and in the use of problem-centered coping strategies on outcomes for persons assigned to the NECT treatment. The intervention can have important implications for enhancing usual care services to reduce disability for people with schizophrenia, and therefore has potentially important implications for improving the public health.
Age
21 - 65 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
John Jay College, City University of New York
New York, New York, United States
Start Date
March 1, 2013
Primary Completion Date
July 31, 2018
Completion Date
July 31, 2018
Last Updated
August 7, 2018
170
ACTUAL participants
Narrative Enhancement and Cognitive Therapy
BEHAVIORAL
Supportive Group Therapy
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York
Collaborators
NCT07455929
NCT06740383
Data Source & Attribution
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