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Cognitive remediation for individuals with psychosis: efficacy and mechanisms of treatment effects

Authors
Fiszdon, J. M.Choi, K. H.Bell, M. D.Choi, J.Silverstein, S. M.
Issue Date
12월-2016
Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Keywords
Cognitive remediation; functioning; mediation; psychosis; schizophrenia
Citation
PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE, v.46, no.16, pp.3275 - 3289
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE
Volume
46
Number
16
Start Page
3275
End Page
3289
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/86787
DOI
10.1017/S0033291716001951
ISSN
0033-2917
Abstract
Background. The popularity of cognitive remediation (CR) interventions for individuals with psychosis is in part based on the well-established link between cognition and functioning and the assumption that by targeting cognition, function can improve. While numerous trials have reported CR's efficacy, it is still not considered an evidence-based treatment. Importantly, little is known about the mechanisms through which it may affect functioning. Method. In this study, we evaluated CR's proximal and distal effects, and examined potential mechanisms. A total of 75 individuals with psychotic disorders were randomized to a combination of strategy-based and drill-and-practice CR or wait-list control, with assessments of training task performance, neurocognition, functional capacity, symptoms and functioning conducted at baseline, end of the 2-month intervention, and 2-month follow-up. Results. Compared with treatment as usual, CR was associated with large post-training improvements on training tasks targeting attention, visuospatial memory, and verbal learning and memory, with persisting group differences at the 2-month follow-up. These generalized to mostly large improvements on neuropsychological measures targeting visuospatial memory, verbal learning and memory, delayed verbal memory and verbal working memory. While there were no CR-associated improvements on measures of functional capacity, symptoms, or a self-report measure of independent living skills, there was an effect on an interviewer-rated measure of functioning (Quality of Life Scale), which appeared primarily driven by the Intrapsychic Foundations subscale. Finally, for those randomized to CR, there were significant, medium-sized correlations between training task improvement, neuropsychological improvement and functioning measures. Conclusions. This suggests a complex, multifactorial relationship between CR, and cognitive and functional change.
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