2010
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbp162
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The Role of Expressed Emotion in Relationships Between Psychiatric Staff and People With a Diagnosis of Psychosis: A Review of the Literature

Abstract: The concept of expressed emotion (EE) has been extended to the study of staff-patient relationships in schizophrenia. A comprehensive review of the literature identified a total of 27 studies investigating EE in this group published between 1990 and 2008. The article aims to assess whether the concept of EE is a useful and valid measure of the quality of professional caregiver and patient relationships, given that staff may be less emotionally invested in relationships than relatives. In doing so, it summarize… Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…Reports referring only to the use of measures were excluded. Instruments exploring expressed emotion in caregivers were also excluded because a recent work has already proposed a review [18]. Finally, we limited our review to English-language articles.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reports referring only to the use of measures were excluded. Instruments exploring expressed emotion in caregivers were also excluded because a recent work has already proposed a review [18]. Finally, we limited our review to English-language articles.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Psychiatric staff play significant roles in the lives of people with psychosis (Berry et al, 2011). This is particularly true in long-stay, low secure psychiatric settings where patients have limited opportunities to leave the unit or to have contact with family members.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As regards psychosis, the studies on professional inner dialogues during treatment dealt with, for example, compulsory treatment measures (MarangosFrost & Wells, 2000;Wynn, 2003), cliniciansÂŽ thoughts on antipsychotic medication (Barley & Harrison, 2008), perceptions of early interventions (Galeazzi & Rigatelli, 2006), expressed emotions (Berry, Barrowclough, & Haddock, 2011), and the stigmatizing attitudes of staff (Rao & Luty, 2009). Holmqvist studied professionals' feelings in relation to patients' diagnoses (Holmqvist, 1998), and treatment outcome (Holmqvist & Armelius, 2006), while studied staff attachment styles.…”
Section: The Professional's Inner Dialoguementioning
confidence: 99%