- McFarlane, William R;
- Levin, Bruce;
- Travis, Lori;
- Lucas, F Lee;
- Lynch, Sarah;
- Verdi, Mary;
- Williams, Deanna;
- Adelsheim, Steven;
- Calkins, Roderick;
- Carter, Cameron S;
- Cornblatt, Barbara;
- Taylor, Stephan F;
- Auther, Andrea M;
- McFarland, Bentson;
- Melton, Ryan;
- Migliorati, Margaret;
- Niendam, Tara;
- Ragland, J Daniel;
- Sale, Tamara;
- Salvador, Melina;
- Spring, Elizabeth
Objective
To test effectiveness of the Early Detection, Intervention, and Prevention of Psychosis Program in preventing the onset of severe psychosis and improving functioning in a national sample of at-risk youth.Methods
In a risk-based allocation study design, 337 youth (age 12-25) at risk of psychosis were assigned to treatment groups based on severity of positive symptoms. Those at clinically higher risk (CHR) or having an early first episode of psychosis (EFEP) were assigned to receive Family-aided Assertive Community Treatment (FACT); those at clinically lower risk (CLR) were assigned to receive community care. Between-groups differences on outcome variables were adjusted statistically according to regression-discontinuity procedures and evaluated using the Global Test Procedure that combined all symptom and functional measures.Results
A total of 337 young people (mean age: 16.6) were assigned to the treatment group (CHR + EFEP, n = 250) or comparison group (CLR, n = 87). On the primary variable, positive symptoms, after 2 years FACT, were superior to community care (2 df, p < .0001) for both CHR (p = .0034) and EFEP (p < .0001) subgroups. Rates of conversion (6.3% CHR vs 2.3% CLR) and first negative event (25% CHR vs 22% CLR) were low but did not differ. FACT was superior in the Global Test (p = .0007; p = .024 for CHR and p = .0002 for EFEP, vs CLR) and in improvement in participation in work and school (p = .025).Conclusion
FACT is effective in improving positive, negative, disorganized and general symptoms, Global Assessment of Functioning, work and school participation and global outcome in youth at risk for, or experiencing very early, psychosis.