“…While the objective, measurable health outcomes, are usually treated as objective burden, the subjective family burden describes the level of burden experienced by family members and is considered to be a category of distress [4][5][6][7]. In line with the family burden theory, the perception of schizophrenia and ways of coping with its course (i.e., psychiatric symptoms) and treatment are circular in nature, causing mutual relationships between experiencing the disease by a patient and experiencing it by family members [2,6,[8][9][10][11][12][13].…”