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There is highly replicated positive correlation between longer duration
of untreated psychosis and poorer outcome
Aims
To study the effect of early intervention in first psychosis on one-year
outcome using an historical quasi-experimental design
Method
We compare the outcome of two samples of first-episode psychosis from the
same healthcare district at different time periods. The historical
control sample was assessed during 19931994, before the establishment of
a system for early detection of psychosis. The experimental sample is the
early detection sample in the Early Treatment and Intervention in
Psychosis study assessed during 1997–2000
Results
At 1-year follow-up, the early detection group was younger, had a smaller
fraction of individuals with schizophrenia, had less severe negative and
general symptoms and had more friends in the past year than the
historical control group. No differences were found in clinical course
(remission, relapse, continuously psychotic) or positive symptoms, but
more patients in the early detection sample were treated as outpatients
without hospitalisation
Conclusions
Early detection of schizophrenia in one healthcare sector is associated
with less severe deterioration at 1 year
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