“…These factors include: (a) diagnosis of a psychotic illness (Bernardo & Forchuck, 2001;Daniels, Kirkby, Hay, Mowry, & Jones, 1998;Hodgson, Lewis, & Boardman, 2001;Kastrup, 1987;Lewis, & Joyce, 1990;Korkelia, Lehtinen, Tuori, & Helenius, 1998;Rabinovitz et al, 1995), (b) being young (Kastrup, 1987;Langdon et al, 2001;Lewis & Joyce, 1990;Vogel & Huguelet, 1997;Woogh, 1986), (c) being male (Appleby et al, 1996;Haywood, Kravitz, Grossman, & Cavanaugh, 1995;Kastrup, 1987;Korkelia et al, 1998;Lewis & Joyce, 1990), (d) being divorced or unmarried (Bernardo & Forchuck, 2001;Hodgson et al, 2001;Rabinovitz et al, 1995), (e) substance misuse (Haywood et al, 1995;Langdon et al, 2001;Woogh, 1986), (f) greater symptom severity regardless of diagnosis (Swett, 1995;Postrado & Lehman, 1995;Lyons et al, 1997), (g) unemployment (Bernardo & Forchuck, 2001;Haywood et al, 1995;Rabinovitz et al, 1995), (h) mode of admission (Hodgson et al, 2001;Korkelia et al, 1998;Vogel & Huguelet, 1997), (i) higher level of education (Bernardo & Forchuck, 2001;Rabinovitz et al, 1995), (j) non-compliance with medication (Haywood et al, 1995;Weiden & Glazer, 1997), (k) quality of life (Postrado & Lehman, 1995), and (l) disrup...…”