Abstract

A common reaction experienced by family members of patients with psychosis is grief for the loss of their healthy relative. Importantly, high levels of perceived loss have been related to the manifestation of high expressed emotion (EE), which includes the negative attitudes expressed by relatives toward an ill family member. However, the mechanisms underlying the relationship between relatives’ perceived loss and EE attitudes in the early stages of psychosis are still not fully understood. In this regard, attachment theory has been suggested as a useful framework for understanding this link. The current study aimed to examine: (1) whether relatives’ perceived loss was associated with relatives’ EE dimensions (i.e., criticism and emotional over-involvement (EOI)), and (2) whether such associations were mediated by relatives’ attachment dimensions (i.e., anxiety and avoidance). Seventy-eight relatives of patients with early psychosis completed the Mental Illness Version of the Texas Inventory of Grief for the assessment of loss reactions. Attachment dimensions and EE attitudes were assessed by the Psychosis Attachment Measure and the Family Questionnaire, respectively. Findings indicated that relatives’ perceived loss was associated with EE dimensions. Relatives’ attachment anxiety, but not avoidance, mediated the relationship of perceived loss with both criticism and EOI. Findings highlight the importance of examining the role of relatives’ attachment characteristics for understanding how perceptions of loss might impact the manifestation of EE attitudes in the early stages of psychosis. Family interventions aimed at assisting relatives to improve their management of negative emotional reactions to loss are fundamental to prevent impairing loss reactions and the entrenchment of high-EE attitudes.

Highlights

  • A prominent reaction described by family members of patients with psychosis is grief [1,2,3]

  • Since the perception of loss may be a major driver of high expressed emotion (EE) attitudes [21, 22], it would be relevant to identify the mediating mechanisms by which perceived loss influences the manifestation of EE in early psychosis relatives

  • Attachment theory has been highlighted as a useful framework for understanding how loss appraisals may contribute to the development of EE [14, 15, 23]

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Summary

Introduction

A prominent reaction described by family members of patients with psychosis is grief [1,2,3]. Since the perception of loss may be a major driver of high EE attitudes [21, 22], it would be relevant to identify the mediating mechanisms by which perceived loss influences the manifestation of EE in early psychosis relatives. In this regard, attachment theory has been highlighted as a useful framework for understanding how loss appraisals may contribute to the development of EE [14, 15, 23]. Relatives’ attachment styles have received theoretical attention as potential underlying mechanisms in the association between perceived loss and EE attitudes [23]

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