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An Investigation of Family Environmental Alteration Affecting Short-Term Recovery from Schizophrenia in China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Chen Rong-Min*
Affiliation:
Fuzhou Hospital for Neurological and Mental Disease, Fuzhou, China

Abstract

Background

It has been hypothesised that change in the family environment affects short-term recovery from schizophrenia.

Method

Observation and study of 210 schizophrenic patients who were influenced by family environmental alteration show that the prognosis of schizophrenia caused suddenly by family environmental alteration is better than that of schizophrenia caused by a persistently unfavourable family environment.

Results

Hence, we think sudden family environmental alterations do not cause psychorrhoea, but slow family environmental alteration may cause change in the mental state of patients. The prognosis is worse in the countryside than in the city. From the study group, we conclude that the first cure rate was 28%, and that 26% of patients were able to work. This indicates that there were no typical cases of the core pattern of schizophrenia, and that there was a certain potential for recovery.

Conclusion

In the future, the emphasis of prevention and treatment must be placed on the countryside, and attention should be paid to the improvement of living and working conditions there, to the correct administration of patients, and to the improvement of recovery measures and therapy. We advocate that efforts should be made in the countryside to raise the national educational and cultural level.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © 1995 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

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