Psychiatry Research
Volume 151, Issue 1 , Pages 97-106, 30 May 2007

Expressed emotion, attributions, utility beliefs, and distress in parents of young people with first episode psychosis

  • Catharine McNab

      Affiliations

    • School of Behavioral Science, University of Melbourne, Australia
    • ORYGEN Youth Health, Melbourne, Australia
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. School of Behavioral Science, University of Melbourne, Vic, 3010, Australia. Tel.: +61 3 8344 6345; fax: +61 3 9347 6618.
  • ,
  • Nick Haslam

      Affiliations

    • School of Behavioral Science, University of Melbourne, Australia
  • ,
  • Peter Burnett

      Affiliations

    • ORYGEN Youth Health, Melbourne, Australia
    • Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Australia

Received 28 August 2005; received in revised form 28 May 2006; accepted 8 August 2006.

Abstract 

This study examined the relationship between expressed emotion (EE), attributions of control, beliefs about the utility of EE behaviors, and distress in parents of young people with first episode psychosis. Fifty-three parents completed self-report measures of EE, attributions of patient and parent control over the psychotic illness, and beliefs about the utility of EE behaviors in controlling the patient's symptomatology. Measures of parental distress and parental assessment of patient symptomatology were also completed. Parents high on criticism EE were more likely to make attributions that the psychotic illness was controllable by the young person, and to endorse the potential utility of person-focused criticism (i.e., telling the patient about the parents' dissatisfaction and frustration with them as a person) in controlling the patient's symptoms. Beliefs in the utility of person-focused criticism and self-sacrifice were significantly associated with distress, but attributions that the illness was controllable by the patient or the parent were not. Beliefs about the utility of criticism may play an important role in EE among parents of young people with first episode psychosis, and may provide further direction for interventions designed for this group.

Keywords: Schizophrenia, Adolescence, Control, Criticism, Emotional overinvolvement

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PII: S0165-1781(06)00220-4

doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2006.08.004

Psychiatry Research
Volume 151, Issue 1 , Pages 97-106, 30 May 2007