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Ethnicity, Expressed Emotion, Attributions, and Course of Schizophrenia: Family Warmth Matters.
Authors:López  Steven Regeser; Nelson Hipke  Kathleen; Polo  Antonio J; Jenkins  Janis H; Karno  Marvin; Vaughn  Christine; Snyder  Karen S
Abstract:The authors examined the role of family factors and the course of schizophrenia by carrying out additional assessments and analyses in 2 previously published studies of Mexican American and Anglo American patients and families. The authors found partial support for an attributional model of relapse for families who are low in emotional overinvolvement. Attributions of control, criticism, and warmth together marginally predicted relapse. The data also indicated that for Mexican Americans, family warmth is a significant protective factor, whereas for Anglo Americans, family criticism is a significant risk factor. These findings suggest that the sociocultural context shapes the pathways by which family processes are related to the course of illness. Moreover, the warmth findings suggest that families may contribute to preventing relapse. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:schizophrenia course  family factors  family warmth  expressed emotion  ethnicity  attributions  emotional involvement
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