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Telephone-delivered psychosocial interventions targeting key health priorities in adults with a psychotic disorder: systematic review

journal contribution
posted on 2018-12-01, 00:00 authored by A L Baker, Alyna TurnerAlyna Turner, A Beck, K Berry, G Haddock, P J Kelly, S Bucci
Background: The mental and physical health of individuals with a psychotic illness are typically poor. Access to psychosocial interventions is important but currently limited. Telephone-delivered interventions may assist. In the current systematic review, we aim to summarise and critically analyse evidence for telephone-delivered psychosocial interventions targeting key health priorities in adults with a psychotic disorder, including (i) relapse, (ii) adherence to psychiatric medication and/or (iii) modifiable cardiovascular disease risk behaviours. Methods: Ten peer-reviewed and four grey literature databases were searched for English-language studies examining psychosocial telephone-delivered interventions targeting relapse, medication adherence and/or health behaviours in adults with a psychotic disorder. Study heterogeneity precluded meta-analyses. Results: Twenty trials [13 randomised controlled trials (RCTs)] were included, involving 2473 participants (relapse prevention = 867; medication adherence = 1273; and health behaviour = 333). Five of eight RCTs targeting relapse prevention and one of three targeting medication adherence reported at least 50% of outcomes in favour of the telephone-delivered intervention. The two health-behaviour RCTs found comparable levels of improvement across treatment conditions. Conclusions: Although most interventions combined telephone and face-to-face delivery, there was evidence to support the benefit of entirely telephone-delivered interventions. Telephone interventions represent a potentially feasible and effective option for improving key health priorities among people with psychotic disorders. Further methodologically rigorous evaluations are warranted.

History

Journal

Psychological medicine

Volume

48

Issue

16

Pagination

2637 - 2657

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

ISSN

0033-2917

eISSN

1469-8978

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Cambridge University Press