Abstract

A 5 year prospective study of 44 first admission schizophrenic patients was conducted in Geneva, in order to evaluate the prognostic value of Expressed Emotion (EE). The predictive power of the EE index was tested on 3 variables of outcome: relapse rates, social adaptation and hospital stays. The EE index and the outcome measures tended to be associated. After the third year, patients living with high EE relatives were significantly more maladjusted and relapsed more than those living with low EE relatives. At intake, the patients presenting more premorbid features lived in high EE households. Our results show that initial measure of EE in a first episode cohort is predictive of outcome over a five-year period. This may not be causal, as it cannot be excluded that poorer premorbid functioning alone may result in poorer outcome, and may also elicit high EE in the relative.

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