Combating Negative Symptoms & Depression in Psychosis
Categories:
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
FEP Project ECHO,
CBT-p,
Department of Psychiatry,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
FEP Project ECHO | Tags:
activity monitoring,
anhedonia,
anticipatory pleasure,
apathy,
asociality,
aspirations,
attempting,
avolition,
BMAC,
Broad Minded Affective Coping Procedure,
CBT-p,
CFT,
cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis,
cognitive model,
Compassion Focused Therapy,
coping strategies,
defeatist beliefs,
delusions,
depression,
dereased concentration,
disctractibility,
emotion regulation,
emotional mood,
engagement,
exercise,
expectation adjustment,
external shame,
fatigue,
FEP,
first episode psychosis,
flat affect,
hallucinations,
hope,
identity,
insight,
internal shame,
linking behavior,
LKM,
Loving Kindness Meditation,
medications,
optimism,
perceived stress,
personal mastery,
planning activity,
postpsychotic depression,
poverty of speech,
psychomotor retardation,
psychosis,
psychosocial interventions,
quality of life,
relationships,
resilence negative symptoms,
routine,
scheduling,
schizophrenia,
schizophrenia spectrum disorders,
sensory walk,
shame,
structure,
suicide,
symptoms,
transdiagnostic,
values,
withdrawal
Strategies on how to combat depression and negative symptoms in psychosis are discussed by Dr. Valerie Kreider.