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Conference paper

COGNITIVE MODELS OF POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE SYMPTOMS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA AND IMPLICATIONS FOR TREATMENT

Borjanka Batinic ; Department of Psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, Clinic of Psychiatry, Clinical Centre of Serbia, Belgrade, Serbia


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Abstract

This article reviews cognitive models of positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia, as well as basic principles of cognitive
behavioural therapy (CBT) for hallucinations, delusions and negative symptoms. Cognitive models of schizophrenia posit that
individuals’ view of the self is influenced by a combination of genetic vulnerability, early childhood experience and environmental
stressors later in the life, and that these factors determine how internal and external experiences are interpreted. Cognitive behavioural
therapy for schizophrenia is based on the basic principles of CBT and establishes connection between thoughts, emotions and
behaviour. Treatment focuses on the meaning the individual attributes to psychotic experience, his or her understanding of it and
ways of coping with symptoms, and is intended to reduce the distress caused by psychotic experience and correct thoughts and
assumptions that are incompatible with objective evidence. The latest contradictory data on the efficacy of CBT for schizophrenia
point to the need to use protocols that are tailored to specific symptoms and subgroups of patients based on the stage of illness, level
of neurocognitive impairment and severity of the disorder, and manual-based in order to ensure fidelity of implementation.

Keywords

schizophrenia; cognitive behavioural models; implications for treatment

Hrčak ID:

262780

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/262780

Publication date:

29.5.2019.

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