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Psychiatr Serv 59:241-247, March 2008
doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.59.3.241
© 2008 American Psychiatric Association
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Article

A Randomized Controlled Trial of Cognitive Remediation Among Inpatients With Persistent Mental Illness

Jean-Pierre Lindenmayer, M.D., Susan Regina McGurk, Ph.D., Kim T. Mueser, Ph.D., Anzalee Khan, M.S., Deborah Wance, M.A., Lisa Hoffman, Ph.D., Rosemarie Wolfe, M.S. and Haiyi Xie, Ph.D.

OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the feasibility and efficacy of a cognitive remediation program in improving cognitive and work functioning for intermediate- to long-stay psychiatric inpatients. METHODS: Eighty-five inpatients with predominantly DSM-IV–defined schizophrenia were randomly assigned to cognitive remediation or to a control condition. The cognitive remediation program consisted of 24 hours of computerized practice over a 12-week period and a weekly discussion group to facilitate transfer of cognitive skills to daily activities. A computer control group received similar hours of staff and computer exposure without cognitive training exercises. A comprehensive neuropsychological battery was administered at baseline and posttreatment. Symptoms were assessed with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) at baseline, midtreatment (six weeks), and posttreatment (12 weeks) and at six- and 12-month follow-ups. Work functioning was tracked during a 12-month follow-up period. RESULTS: The average number of 45-minute sessions completed was 23. Patients in the cognitive remediation group demonstrated significantly greater improvements over three months than the control group in the composite measure of overall cognitive functioning, psychomotor speed, and verbal learning. In addition, patients who received cognitive remediation worked more weeks than the control group over the 12-month follow-up period. Patients in both groups showed significant and comparable improvements over the follow-up period on the positive, activation, and depression subscales of the PANSS. CONCLUSIONS: Cognitive remediation was a feasible treatment for this group of inpatients and more effective at improving cognitive functioning than a computer control intervention. Longer-term follow-up indicated that cognitive remediation was associated with better work outcomes, suggesting benefits in psychosocial functioning.


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