Abstrakt: |
Schizophrenic patients discharged from acute inpatient settings are often unprepared to function outside the hospital, leading to recidivism and frequent rehospitalization. Social skills training programs addressing this need have hitherto only been developed for use in outpatient or long-term inpatient settings. We describe the development of a social skills training program for application in a short-term acute inpatient unit. Nursing coordinates the program, which is designed for a 3 to 4 week hospitalization and is delivered in an open group setting. The training program emphasizes communication skills, problem solving, affect identification, needs recognition, and social relatedness. The program uses group discussions, writing tasks, physical activity, education, role-play, feed-back, and assignments. Goals include assessment of individual deficits, inculcation of awareness that life-objectives can be identified and achieved, assistance with transition to postdischarge living situation or outpatient treatment program, and development of awareness of one's roles and responsibilities. The evolution and present structure of the program are described and four representative lessons are detailed. |