- Family therapy is - as it sounds - a therapy which involves the family members of the person with schizophrenia
- The psychological explanations of schizophrenia (schizophrenogenic mother, double-bind and expressed emotion) focus squarely on the possible toxic home environment as key contributing factors to the development of schizophrenia so it makes sense to address the family dynamic in therapy sessions
- Family therapy sessions aim to reduce the stress of schizophrenia for all those involved: the patient themselves and their immediate family who have to cope with the illness indirectly on a daily basis
- Family therapy sessions will aim to reduce stress, help family members process their thoughts and feelings about the illness and come together to find practical, feasible problem-solving solutions to the situation
- Pharaoh et al. (2010) identified the most important goals of family therapy for schizophrenia patients:
- Eliminate or at least reduce destructive emotions such as shame, guilt, anger which can affect all family members
- Enable the family to work as a team and to understand that ‘we’re all in this together’
- Educate family members as to the nature of schizophrenia as an illness and dispel any myths or misinformation they may have about the condition
- The outcome of family therapy should be that the person with schizophrenia is supported in their illness to the extent that the aversive symptoms of schizophrenia reduce significantly
Family therapy may be tough and present challenges but it will ultimately produce positive outcomes for all those involved.
Research which investigates psychological therapies
- Kart et al. (2021) - A review article which concluded that CBT is an effective therapy, particularly in treating the positive symptoms of schizophrenia
- Turkington et al. (2006) found that CBT can be combined with family therapy to treat both positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia and to generally improve outcomes for the person with schizophrenia
- Caqueo-Urizar et al. (2015) - A review article which emphasises the vital role of family therapy in the face of cut-backs in mental health care facilities and which stresses the need for health professionals to assist and guide family members in the care of the person with schizophrenia
Evaluation of psychological therapies
Strengths
- CBT has been tried and tested as a suitable therapy for schizophrenia (and for some of the comorbid disorders which patients might suffer from e.g. depression) which means that as a treatment it has good validity
- Family therapy should result in a schizophrenia patient feeling less alone and isolated which should ultimately benefit the economy as it means less reliance on external mental health providers plus the patient may be able to work which means fewer days absence lost to sickness
Weaknesses
- Not everybody is suited to CBT and as schizophrenia exists on a spectrum it may only be appropriate for those whose symptoms are mild or easily managed
- Family therapy may actually worsen someone’s symptoms if they feel that they are being forced to interact with or depend on people who are emotionally destructive i.e. the family dynamic is too toxic but the patient may not be able to express or admit this to a health professional
Link to Approaches:
The Social Learning Theory approach has relevance to this topic: children internalise the behaviours they learn from parents via observation and the mediational processes involved.
The Cognitive and Behaviourist approaches both apply to CBT: faulty thought processes can be remedied or modified using a kind of conditioned behaviour (e.g. ‘Every time I think I hear voices I should tap my right hand three times to remind myself that these voices are not real’)