Journal article
The phenomenological model of psychotic vulnerability and its possible implications for psychological interventions in the ultra-high risk ('prodromal') population
B Nelson, LA Sass, B Škodlar
Psychopathology | KARGER | Published : 2009
DOI: 10.1159/000228837
Abstract
The early intervention movement for treatment of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders has extended to include pharmacological and psychological treatment of putatively prodromal (or 'ultra-high risk') patients. The psychotherapy that has been trialed to date is cognitive-behaviour therapy (CBT), due to its apparent success with patients with established psychotic disorder and its current popularity as a therapeutic modality. This paper presents phenomenological models of psychotic, particularly schizophrenic, vulnerability, which emphasise a disturbed basic sense of self (ipseity) and intersubjectivity. We argue that these phenomenological models indicate that CBT may not be the most ..
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Funding Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank Alison R. Yung, Steve Leicester, Catharine McNab and Anna Sidis for comments on an earlier version of this paper. We acknowledge the support of the Colonial Foundation. B.N. was supported by a Ronald Philip Griffith Fellowship and a NARSAD Young Investigator Award.