Positive Changes Experienced After a First Episode of Psychosis: A Systematic Review
Abstract
Objective:
Methods:
Results:
Conclusions:
Methods
Formulating Review Questions
Defining Eligibility Criteria
Identifying Sources of Information
Identifying Potentially Relevant Studies and Selecting Studies
Appraising the Quality of Studies
Synthesis Design
Results
Characteristics and Quality Appraisal of the Included Studies
Study | Country | Quality score (%)a | Aim | Approach | Data collection | Themesb |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barker et al., 2001 (27) | United Kingdom | 75 | To explore the narratives used to explain the process of developing schizophrenia | Grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: services |
MacDonald et al., 2005 (43) | Australia | 100 | To explore experiences of social relationships during recovery from FEP | Phenomenological approach | Open-ended interview | Aspects: individual level; interpersonal; facilitators: personal |
Mackrell and Lavender, 2004 (44) | United Kingdom | 100 | To explore peer relationships before, during, and after the onset of FEP among people recovering from FEP | Grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: na |
O'Toole et al., 2004 (64) | United Kingdom | 25 | To explore experiences of an FEP intervention and establish aims seen as effective for future service planning | Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Focus groups | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: personal and services |
Connell et al., 2015 (38) | Australia | 75 | To explore experiences of the early stages of recovery from FEP | Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: personal |
Krupa et al., 2010 (60) | Canada and Australia | 75 | To explore activity and social participation after FEP | Constructivist grounded theory | Semistructured interviews; document analysis | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: services |
Vodušek et al., 2014 (45) | Slovenia | 25 | To explore the emotional experience of FEP | Phenomenological approach | Open-ended interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: na |
Tanskanen et al., 2011 (28) | United Kingdom | 50 | To explore experiences of onset of FEP and help seeking for FEP | Thematic analysis | Semistructured Interviews | Aspects: spiritual;facilitators: spiritual |
Windell and Norman, 2013 (46) | Canada | 50 | To examine perceptions of what influences recovery after FEP | Thematic analysis | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: personal, social, and services |
Anderson et al., 2013 (59) | Canada | 50 | To explore pathways to care and factors that influence help seeking | Qualitative descriptive approach | Unstructured and semistructured, in-depth interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: na |
Stewart, 2013 (61) | Australia | 100 | To explore the process of engagement in treatment after FEP | Grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: services |
Eisenstadt et al., 2012 (47) | Brazil | 25 | To understand the experience of recovery after FEP | Phenomenological approach | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: na |
Harris et al., 2012 (48) | United Kingdom | 75 | To explore service user experiences of being in contact with early intervention services and the impact of that contact | Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: services |
Ashcroft et al., 2012 (49) | United Kingdom | 100 | To explore experiences of receiving mindfulness therapy within an early intervention program for psychosis | Grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: services |
Braehler and Schwannauer, 2012 (41) | United Kingdom | 100 | To investigate how people adapt to psychosis and the influence of reflective function on adaptation | Constructivist grounded theory | Semistructured interviews, Adult Attachment Interview, reflective functioning rating | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: personal |
Hon, 2012 (50) | United Kingdom | 100 | To gain an understanding of medication-taking practices | Grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: na |
Bradshaw et al., 2012 (62) | United Kingdom | 100 | To develop and evaluate a healthy living intervention | Framework analysis | Semistructured Interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: services |
Lester et al., 2012 (63) | United Kingdom | 75 | To explore perspectives of early intervention services and primary care over time | Constructivist grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: services |
Cadario et al., 2012 (29) | New Zealand | 75 | To examine the experience of FEP and the experience of accessing treatment | General inductive approach | Unstructured and semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: na |
Sin et al., 2012 (31) | United Kingdom | 25 | To explore the needs of siblings of people receiving early intervention services for FEP | Thematic analysis and framework analysis | Semistructured Interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal; facilitators: na |
Lam et al., 2011 (52) | China (Hong Kong) | 50 | To explore the meaning of FEP and meanings related to illness and recovery | A combination of various qualitative methods | Focus groups | Aspects: individual level, and interpersonal;facilitators: na |
Lester et al., 2011 (51) | United Kingdom | 50 | To describe views of people referred to early intervention services within the context of their relationships | Constructivist grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: personal and services |
Brown, 2011 (40) | Canada | 100 | To understand ways that FEP affects occupational performance | Thematic analysis | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: na |
McCann et al., 2011 (30) | Australia | 75 | To explore the experience of providing care to persons with FEP | Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal; facilitators: personal and social |
Sin et al., 2008 (32) | United Kingdom | 50 | To explore the experiences and needs of siblings of persons who experienced FEP | Phenomenological approach | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: na |
Hirschfeld et al., 2005 (53) | United Kingdom | 75 | To explore the lives of young men before, during, and after FEP | Constructivist grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: personal |
Larsen, 2004 (42) | Denmark | 100 | To examine how individuals generate meaning after FEP | Person-centered ethnographic approach | Documentary analysis, individual interviews, focus groups, surveys, time registration forms, written narratives | Aspects: individual level, interpersonal, and spiritual; facilitators: personal and services |
Kilkku et al., 2003 (39) | Finland | 100 | To describe how people who experienced FEP experienced information giving and the meaning of information giving | Phenomenological approach | Unstructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: personal and services |
Newman et al., 2011 (54) | United Kingdom | 50 | To explore the impact of FEP on siblings’ experience of self, identity development, and family roles | Narrative analysis | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: personal and social |
Nilsen et al., 2016 (34) | Norway | 50 | To explore the benefits of receiving a psychoeducational family intervention after FEP | Systematic text condensation | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: personal and services |
Bourdeau et al., 2015 (55) | Canada (Quebec) | 25 | To explore the links between recovery stages, symptoms, function, and narrative development among people after FEP | Mixed methods: content analysis for qualitative data; descriptive discriminant analysis and t tests for quantitative data; unspecified method of integrating qualitative and quantitative findings | Psychosocial Rehabilitation Toolkit, Social Functioning Scale, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale–Expanded, California Verbal Learning Test, Trail Making Test (A and B), structured interview (Indiana Psychiatric Illness Interview) | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: na |
Subandi, 2015 (35) | Indonesia | 75 | To explore the process of recovery from FEP in a Javanese cultural setting | Ethnographic | Unstructured interviews | Aspects: individual level, interpersonal, and spiritual;facilitators: personal and spiritual |
Gearing et al., 2014 (33) | United States | 50 | To examine pathways in youth self-determination and self-management of treatment for FEP | Content analysis | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: na |
de Wet et al., 2015 (56) | South Africa | 50 | To understand the experience of recovery from FEP among persons living in South Africa | Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level; facilitators: spiritual |
Connell et al., 2015 (57) | Australia | 50 | To understand the process of change in self and its relationship to recovery | Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Interviews (not specified) | Aspects: individual level and spiritual; facilitators: personal |
Brand et al., 2010 (37) | United Kingdom (London) | 100 | To explore the meaning of friendship for friends of people who have experienced FEP | Constructivist grounded theory | Semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: na |
Dunkley and Bates, 2015 (36) | Australia | 50 | To explore accounts of posttraumatic growth after FEP | Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Semistructured Interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal; facilitators: personal, social, and services |
McGrath et al., 2013 (58) | United Kingdom | 50 | To develop a theoretical understanding of recovery from FEP after childbirth | Constructivist grounded theory | Semistructured Interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal;facilitators: personal and social |
Pietruch and Jobson, 2012 (20) | United Kingdom | 25 | To investigate the relationship between posttraumatic growth and self-disclosure of posttraumatic stress symptoms and recovery | Quantitative descriptive study | Actual self-disclosure measure, Posttraumatic Growth Inventory, Process of Recovery Questionnaire | Aspects: individual level, interpersonal, and spiritual; facilitators: personal |
Dunkley et al., 2007 (21) | Australia | 25 | To examine recovery from FEP in terms of trauma and posttraumatic growth | Quantitative: descriptive statistics; qualitative: thematic analysis | Quantitative: Recovery Style Questionnaire, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, Qualitative: semistructured interviews | Aspects: individual level and interpersonal; facilitators: na |
Study | Diagnosis | Race-ethnicity | Sex and sample size | Stakeholders | Age (M or range) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barker et al., 2001 (27) | Schizophrenia | na | Service users: females (N=2), males (N=6); family: females (N=2), males (N=6) | Service users, family members | Service users, 37.5 |
MacDonald et al., 2005 (43) | FEP | Caucasian (N=6) | Females (N=1), males (N=5) | Service users | 21.99 |
Mackrell and Lavender, 2004 (44) | Psychotic disorder, schizophrenia, polymorphic disorder with symptoms of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder (N not specified) | Black Caribbean (N=2), black African (N=2), white British (N=2), Japanese (N=1), white Irish (N=1), Canadian (N=1), Portuguese (N=1), mixed from Sierra Leone (N=1) | Females (N=5), males (N=6) | Service users | na |
O'Toole et al., 2004 (64) | Schizophrenia (N=10), schizoaffective disorder (N=2) | Mixed (N=2), white (N=5), Asian (N=2), African-Caribbean (N=3) | Females (N=3), males (N=9) | Service users | 26.58 |
Connell et al., 2015 (38) | FEP | na | Females (N=6), males (N=20) | Service users | 21 |
Krupa et al., 2010 (60) | FEP | Living in Canada (N=20), living in Australia (N=5) | Females (N=8), males (N=17) | Service users | 25.7 |
Vodušek et al., 2014 (45) | “Non-affective psychosis” | na | Females (N=8), males (N=12) | Service users | 22.1 |
Tanskanen et al., 2011 (28) | FEP | Service users: white British (N=3), white other (N=4), black African (N=3), black Caribbean (N=5), Asian-Bangladeshi (N=4), mixed race (N=2); caregivers: white British (N=5), white other (N=2), black Caribbean (N=1), mixed race (N=1) | Service users: females (N=6), males (N=15); caregivers: females (N=8), males (N=1) | Service users, caregivers | Service users, 26.5; caregivers, 26–68 |
Windell and Norman, 2013 (46) | Schizophrenia (N=16), schizoaffective disorder (N=8), psychosis NOS (N=3), substance-induced psychosis (N=2), bipolar disorder (N=1) | na | Females (N=7), males (N=23) | Service users | 25.87 |
Anderson et al., 2013 (59) | na | na | Females (N=4), males (N=12) | Service users | 22.5 |
Stewart, 2013 (61) | Schizophrenia (N=14), schizoaffective disorder (N=6), depression (N=6), bipolar disorder (N=3), brief psychotic episode (N=1) | Born overseas (Hong Kong, Greece, Spain, and Fiji) (N=4), first-born Australians from immigrants (N=21), first-born Australians from nonimmigrants of English descent (N=5) | Females (N=15), males (N=15) | Service users | na |
Eisenstadt et al., 2012 (47) | Paranoid schizophrenia (N=8), schizoaffective disorder (N=3), schizophreniform disorder (N=2), catatonic schizophrenia (N=1), psychosis NOS (N=1), persistent delusional disorder (N=1) | na | Females (N=4), males (N=12) | Service users | 20.13 |
Harris et al., 2012 (48) | na | na | Females (N=3), males (N=5) | Service users | 29.25 |
Ashcroft et al., 2012 (49) | “Persistent difficulties with either positive symptoms, or anxiety, or both” | White British (N=9) | Females (N=2), males (N=7) | Service users | 25.56 |
Braehler and Schwannauer, 2012 (41) | “Schizophrenia-like” (N=4), schizoaffective disorder (N=1), bipolar disorder (N=2), psychotic depression (N=1) | na | Females (N=4), males (N=4) | Service users | 18.6 |
Hon, 2012 (50) | Schizophrenia (N=6), schizoaffective disorder (N=3), bipolar disorder (N=3) | na | Females (N=5), males (N=7) | Service users | 25.16 |
Bradshaw et al., 2012 (62) | na | White British (N=8), black African (N=2), South Asian (N=3) | Females (N=3), males (N=10) | Service users, health professionals | 25.5 |
Lester et al., 2012 (63) | na | White British (N=16), Pakistani (N=2), Indian (N=2), mixed (N=1) | Females (N=7), males (N=14) | Service users | 23.28 |
Cadario et al., 2012 (29) | Schizophrenia (N=8), bipolar disorder (N=4) | New Zealand European (N=7), New Zealand Māori (N=4), New Zealand Māori–Cook Island Māori (N=1) | Service users: females (N=5), males (N=7);caregivers: females (N=11), males (N=1) | Service users, primary caregivers | 15–18 |
Sin et al., 2012 (31) | na | White British (N=18), black African (N=2), Asian (N=5), mixed (N=6) | Females (N=22), males (N=9) | Siblings | 22.7 |
Lam et al., 2011 (52) | Paranoid schizophrenia (N=4), “unspecified psychosis” (N=1), acute psychotic disorder (N=1) | Cantonese-speaking Chinese (N=6) | Females (N=3), males (N=3) | Service users | 25 |
Lester et al., 2011 (51) | na | White British (N=25), white other (N=1), Irish (N=1), Pakistani (N=3), Indian (N=2), black Caribbean (N=1), black African (N=1) | Females (N=10), males (N=24) | Service users | 22 |
Brown, 2011 (40) | na | na | Females (N=3), males (N=2) | Service users | 24–29 |
McCann et al., 2011 (30) | na | English speaking (N=16), Vietnamese speaking (N=1), English and Tagalog speaking (N=1), English and Spanish speaking (N=1), English and Romanian speaking (N=1) | Females (N=17), males (N=3) | Primary caregivers | 21–76 |
Sin et al., 2008 (32) | na | White British (N=7), Pakistani (N=1), black African (N=1), mixed (N=1) | Females (N=8), males (N=2) | Siblings | 22.8 |
Hirschfeld et al., 2005 (53) | na | English (N=5), Irish-born South African (N=1) | Males (N=6) | Service users | 23.3 |
Larsen, 2004 (42) | na | na | na | Service users, health professionals | na |
Kilkku et al., 2003 (39) | na | na | na | Service users | na |
Newman et al., 2011 (54) | na | White British (N=4) | Females (N=2), males (N=2) | Siblings | 20.75 |
Nilsen et al., 2016 (34) | Schizophrenia (N=10), schizoaffective disorder (N=1), psychosis NOS (N=1) | White (N=9), Asian (N=3) | Service users: females (N=7), males (N=5)family: females (N=8), males (N=6) | Service users, family members | Service users, 26.78; family members, 56 |
Bourdeau et al., 2015 (55) | Schizophrenia (N=29), psychosis NOS (N=47), bipolar disorder (N=4), schizoaffective disorder (N=3), psychotic depression (N=3), substance-induced psychosis (N=1) | Caucasian (N=36), African Caribbean (N=9), Asian (N=1), Latin American (N=1) | Females (N=11), males (N=36) | Service users | 26 |
Subandi, 2015 (35) | FEP | Javanese | Females (N=6), males (N=1) | Service users, family members | na |
Gearing et al., 2014 (33) | Schizophrenia (N=3), bipolar disorder (N=5), major depression (N=1), psychosis NOS (N=2) | Caucasian (N=6), Hispanic (N=3), Asian (N=2), African American (N=1) | Service users: females (N=6), males (N=6);family: females (N=13), males (N=3) | Service users, family members | Service users, 19.3; family members, 53.1 |
de Wet et al., 2015 (56) | Schizophrenia (N=5), schizophreniform disorder (N=2) | “Coloured” (N=6), white (N=1) | Females (N=3), males (N=4) | Service users | 35.29 |
Connell et al., 2015 (57) | Bipolar disorder (N=5), schizophrenia (N=3), schizophreniform disorder (N=2), substance-induced psychosis (N=2) | Country of birth: Australia (N=10), “overseas” (N=2) | Females (N=3), males (N=9) | Service users | 21 |
Brand et al., 2010 (37) | na | White British (N=5), black British (N=1), mixed European (N=1) | Females (N=4), males (N=3) | Friends | 21 |
Dunkley and Bates, 2015 (36) | FEP | na | Service users: females (N=3), males (N=7);romantic partners: females (N=2); parents: females (N=4), males (N=1) | Service users, romantic partners, family members | 22–28 |
McGrath et al., 2013 (58) | Puerperal psychosis (N=11), postpartum depression with psychotic features (N=1) | White British (N=12) | Females (N=12) | Service users | 35.6 |
Pietruch and Jobson, 2012 (20) | na | na | Females (N=12), males (N=22) | Service users | 25.67 |
Dunkley et al., 2007 (21) | Bipolar disorder (N=2) | na | Females (N=1), males (N=1) | Service users | 23.5 |
Synthesis of Included Studies
Broader, Negative Experiences Associated With FEP
Positive Changes After FEP
Individual-level positive change.
Interpersonal positive change.
Religious or spiritual-level positive change.
Facilitators of Positive Changes After FEP
Personal factors.
Social factors.
Religious or spiritual factors.
Aspects of mental health care services.
Discussion and Conclusions
Implications for Service Delivery
Strengths
Limitations
Future Directions
Acknowledgments
Footnote
Supplementary Material
- View/Download
- 53.95 KB
References
Information & Authors
Information
Published In
History
Keywords
Authors
Competing Interests
Metrics & Citations
Metrics
Citations
Export Citations
If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.
For more information or tips please see 'Downloading to a citation manager' in the Help menu.
View Options
View options
PDF/EPUB
View PDF/EPUBLogin options
Already a subscriber? Access your subscription through your login credentials or your institution for full access to this article.
Personal login Institutional Login Open Athens loginNot a subscriber?
PsychiatryOnline subscription options offer access to the DSM-5-TR® library, books, journals, CME, and patient resources. This all-in-one virtual library provides psychiatrists and mental health professionals with key resources for diagnosis, treatment, research, and professional development.
Need more help? PsychiatryOnline Customer Service may be reached by emailing [email protected] or by calling 800-368-5777 (in the U.S.) or 703-907-7322 (outside the U.S.).