Pharmaco-psychosocial treatment (PPST) refers to a treatment paradigm combining pharmacotherapy with psychosocial therapy. We conducted an 18-month randomized controlled tracking study to evaluate the efficacy of social skills training (SST) in 11 individuals with schizophrenia on risperidone monotherapy. They were randomized to either SST or non-SST group, and Global Assessment Functioning (GAF) and Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) scores in the 2 groups showed gradual improvement. In the SST group, Digit Span Distraction Test (DSDT) at 12 and 18 months showed significant improvement. The Subjective Deficit Syndrome Scale (SDSS) scores in the SST group showed significant improvement after 6 months and showed a significant difference in comparison between the groups. After the subjective feeling of health was recovered, the items of motivation were recovered as a direct effect of SST. Some items of the Life Assessment Scale for the Mentally Ill (LASMI) score showed significant improvement (or significant trend) in only the SST group after 6 months. Items of daily life, work skills, and self-recognition were continuously improved. We report 2 cases in the SST group that had DSDT improvement in parallel with change of action and communication as a change of social function. This study is only exploratory due to the small number of cases. However, we have demonstrated potential improvement in cognitive function due to learning experiences that required working memory and attention, thus providing improvement in social life.
The pharmaco-psychosocial treatment (PPST) research group, which was proposed by Nishizono in 2000 [
Social skills training (SST) is a therapeutic component that is provided alone or with many other therapies, which when carefully combined, can increase prospects for recovery of individual with mental disorder [
In this study, we report the results of an 18-month study of 11 cases who were separated into a pharmacotherapy group and a pharmacotherapy with SST group and followed up to examine the clinical effectiveness of PPST. We report results comparing both groups.
The subjects were outpatients with schizophrenia diagnosed according to the DSM-IV-TR criteria. All subjects under 40 years of age, had received risperidone (RIS) continuously for at least 8 weeks, and had never received SST until the start of this study. All of them agreed to participate in the study and provided written informed consent. This study was conducted in accordance with the ethical principles listed in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki and with the approval of the ethics committees of our hospitals.
These subjects were randomly assigned to either the SST group or the non-SST group. Eleven cases (7 men and 4 women) were assigned to the SST group (6 cases; age, 31.7 ± 7.9 years, mean ± standard deviation [SD]) and 5 to the control group (age, 30.6 ± 8.2 years). All patients received RIS monotherapy (≤12 mg/day) as antipsychotic maintenance therapy, and cases in the SST group received SST concomitantly for at least 6 months. Cases in the SST group participated in a course of medication self-management (about 1 h/week), which was a module of the SST program that was completed over approximately 9 months. Doctors, nurses, and a pharmacist served as SST trainers for this module. We practiced how to communicate in accordance with the basic training model, and we practiced 4 skills: to obtain information about the benefits of antipsychotic medication, to know the correct method of self-administration and evaluate medicine, to identify the side effects of medication, and to negotiate medication issues with health-care providers. Continuing the training, they played the roles of doctor, nurse, and caseworker and practiced asking about benefits and side effects of the medicine in a consultation room or by telephone. They also practiced how to consult and confirmed their knowledge about the medication. They practiced making appointments and consulting with providers. They practiced how to handle the situation if they ran out of medication or had insufficient medication, and how to handle invitations of drinking, by using problem-solving methods. All cases were followed up for 18 months and received clinical evaluation at study entry and at 3, 6, 12, and 18 months thereafter.
The Global Assessment Functioning (GAF) considers social and occupational functioning on a hypothetical continuum of mental health disorders, which includes impairment in functioning due to physical limitations, as well as mental impairment. Producing the GAF rating involves choosing single values that best reflect the individual’s overall level of functioning. The description of each 10-point range in the GAF scale has 2 components: the first part covers symptom severity and the second part covers functioning. The GAF rating is within a particular decile if either the symptom severity or the level of functioning falls within the range.
The Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) was developed to provide rapid assessment of severity of schizophrenic states during treatment. It consists of 18 items of mostly global clinically familiar symptoms and behavior constructs that span much of the range of manifest psychopharmacology, each rated on an 8-point scale. Ratings are made during a brief (15 - 20 min), unstructured interview with the individual with mental illness. Each item is defined by 1 or 2 sentences of clinical description [4,5].
The Drug-Induced Extrapyramidal Symptoms Scale (DIEPSS) was used to assess treatment-emergent extrapyramidal symptoms. It consists of 8 individual parameters and 1 global assessment for the purpose of estimating extrapyramidal symptoms as an adverse event. The severity of each item is graded from 0 (normal) to 4 (severe), and each category has clearly defined anchor points [6-8].
The Life Assessment Scale for the Mentally Ill (LASMI) was used to evaluate how schizophrenia affects every day social life in diverse life situations. It consists of daily life (12 items), interpersonal relations (13 items), work skills (10 items), endurance and stability (2 items), and self-recognition (item 3) from a total of 40 items in 5 subscales. Score is 0 points (no problem) to 4 points (much of a problem). A higher score means that the symptoms are severe [9,10].
The Digit Span Distractibility Test (DSDT) was used to evaluate cognitive function. It is a digit span task under an interference condition, and is one of the methods used to examine neurocognitive function. Healthcare professionals conduct the test with an attached CD-ROM, and individuals with mental illness write the answers on an answer sheet. The evaluator (healthcare professional) counts the number of correct answers (number of digits correctly in order) and the number of erroneous answers, and calculates the percentages of correct answers [11, 12].
The SF-36 is a generic measure of functional health and well-being with psychometrically based physical and mental health summary measures, comprising 8 domains that assess quality of life parameters. Scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating a better quality of life. From these 8 domains, a physical component summary score and a mental component summary score were calculated [13-15].
The Subjective Deficit Syndrome Scale (SDSS) consists of 19 items that constitute subjective complaints. It is intended to measure only self-reported complaints of the individual with schizophrenia, and not the interviewer’s judgment of the individual’s distress [16-18].
All assessment results were analyzed statistically.
None of the cases in the SST group dropped out during the 18 months because of aggravated symptoms or adverse reactions. At the entry of this study, the average dose of RIS (mean ± SD) of the SST group was 6.8 ± 3.9 mg/day, while that of the non-SST group was 2.2 ± 1.3 mg/day. There was no significant difference in the RIS dosage between the 2 groups (p < 0.05). At the 18-month follow-up, the average dose of RIS of the SST group was 7.0 ± 2.4 mg/day, while that of the non-SST control group was 4.0 ± 1.9 mg/day. There was no significant difference in the RIS dosage between the 2 groups (p < 0.05). There was an increasing tendency of RIS dosage at the beginning of the intervention and at the 18th month in the SST group.
Data of both groups showed a tendency toward improvement in the rating scales during the follow-up. The summary of the results of this study is as follows:
1) The GAF and BPRS scores trended toward modest improvements in both groups. Only the SST group showed significant improvement in the GAF score compared with that at the start (
2) The SDSS also showed significant improvement after 6 months, and showed a significant difference when both groups were compared (
3) In the longitudinal course of 18 months, the DSDT score showed a significant improvement in the SST
group at the 12th and 18th months (
4) Some items in LASMI showed significant improvement or a significant trend only in the SST group after 6 months of treatment (
5) There was no significant difference in the RIS dosage from the beginning of the intervention and at the 18th month time point in the SST group. However, DIEPSS after 12 months and 18 months tended to improve.
Our study has some clear trends. It is particularly worth mentioning that this was a randomized controlled study and there was a follow-up investigation for 18 months from the start of the treatment in order to clarify the effect of SST on social function. Kurtz et al. performed a metanalysis of clinical studies on SST randomized controlled trials [
The statistical power was insufficient because the number of cases was small. We verified the changes in the groups by using individual cases and compared them with cases in the control group.
The GAF and BPRS scores improved, and the DSDT and LASMI scores mildly improved. The GAF score was 55 at study entry, 58 at the 3rd month, 80 at the 6th month, and continued improving until the end of the study. The DSDT score was 61% at study entry and 97% at the 18th month. In the LASMI, the scores of daily life (D) and self-recognition (R) improved. This corresponds to the fact that he was dependent on his mother and he did not clean his room well at the start of SST, and that he had begun paying attention to his life rhythm and appearance by himself at the 18-month follow-up exam. As he improved his skills by the medication self-management module, he could tell a doctor that he was able to sleep well. As a result, his dose of hypnotics was reduced. Although he was reluctant to take medicine until then, he realized that he slept well and began to participate in treatment positively.
The medication self-management module also helped him, in that it allowed him to bring a medical certificate to the government office of disability pension. The practice of taking notes played an important role in organizing his daily life, and allowed him to acquire the skills to speak to his doctor by checking his notes during consul-
tation. He could fill in a medication checklist and report regularly. As he continued to practice his medication list (to write the date on a pill bag and to arrange pills in each week), he became more skilled at this task. He wrote a daily medication management table to report during his examinations. In the medication self-management knowledge question (yes-no question), he scored 17 of 19 (89%) before training and had an improved score of 19 points (100%) after training. Thus, although the evaluation scales did not improve greatly, his skills for social life improved in many aspects. His job of 7 years was to compounding materials for house walls, which involves weighing, mixing, and packing materials (X kg of material A and Y kg of material B and etc.). The fact that the SDSS score became worse at the 12th and 18th months may correspond to the fact that he had complained to the factory manager where he worked that his workload was increased, and he had quarreled with his mother after 8 months. He seemed to feel stressed because he had not been accustomed to dealing with his work efficiently and systematically.
After his amount of work was decreased, he relaxed and his symptoms improved. He became better able to be aware of his fatigue, but he was poor at making arrangements. Subsequently he gained strength and began to consult about his troubles. He began to rest well on weekends. Initially, he had difficulty in systematically proceeding to plan and carry out a number of challenges, but we found that there was significant improvement in his efficiency, so he had difficulty in performing tasks and working according to plan at first, but with treatment, he began to work more effectively. This shows that his attention also improved. When the factory manager spoke to workers, he initially felt accused by the manager. However, he learned to understand that the manager spoke not just to him, but to others workers also.
We compared this case with a 34-year-old man in the conventional treatment group (non-SST group), who was near the same age. His LASMI score and SDSS score did not improve. The reasons might be as follows: He was married and he was a former dental technician whose social skills had been high. His schizophrenia symptoms had started 19 months before baseline assessment. Because he had paranoid ideation and exhibited behaviors
threatening to self and others (i.e., reckless speeding on expressways), he was committed to inpatient treatment, and subsequently he improved. Superficially, his functions did not decrease significantly, and a relatively small dosage of RIS was effective. Initially, for restlessness and anxiety, he took lorazepam, but he gradually decreased taking this medication. At the end of the study, he quit his job as a dental technician and began to go to nursing school. His DSDT score improved temporarily, but became worse as time passed. At the beginning, he sometimes forgot to take medicine in the evenings. This meant that his adherence of medication and insight was poor. With respect to LASMI, he had a social goal such as going to a nursing school, but his life rhythm scores, such as daily life (D) did not change, and handling of vagueness and resistance to stress did not improve over the long term during this study. The SDSS scores also were unchanged.
In this case, the subject’s GAF score and BPRS score improved and the DSDT score and LASMI score improved slightly as time passed. The SDSS score improved significantly at the 3rd month, and continued to improve. With reduced RIS dosage (11 mg/day at the study entry, 6 mg/day at the 18th month), the DIEPSS score improved significantly.
In SST role-play, facial expression and nonverbal communication improved. In fact, the case, came to the clinic with a smile every time, although he still reported hearing voices. He could fill in the medication check list every day, which he practiced in the medication self-management module, and could report regularly. He did not attend the daycare treatment regularly. He was obese, and his blood test results showed fatty liver. After attending SST, he was able to go to the daycare center several days a week at the 6th month, but he complained of insomnia due to interpersonal tension at the daycare treatment. Until the 18th month, he found that his delusion and auditory hallucinations decreased. He began a diet (not exercise, but mainly meal and beverage restrictions). As a result, he lost about 10 kg of body weight and his blood test results improved. He was able to ask
the doctor to reduce the amount of his hepatoprotective medicine because he lost weight and his hepatic function improved, and his attitude towards consultation changed. He became active and he attended daycare 4 days a week and did not complain of fatigue. His body shape significantly changed. These improvements in his condition seemed to affect his SDSS score.
At the start of the study, the case had severe syndromes regarding nervousness, lack of stamina, tolerance for conflicts, external events, impoverished motivation, and willpower/initiative, but all items became mild at the 3rd and 6th months. At the 12th month, he reported that he often felt physical/mental lassitude, adynamia, and lack of stamina. He reported insomnia and he was worried about a friend at the daycare services at that time. However, he solved his problems and these items improved. Because there were changes in relationships with friends at the daycare and he had interaction with new SST members, he paid attention to his appearance and his hair style. These facts affected improvements in his establishment of life rhythm, balanced diet, money management, and dosage management in daily life (D); spontaneous conversation and rejection in interpersonal relations (I); challenge to problem, prospects for achievement, understanding of procedures, alteration of procedure, stability, and resistance to stress in work skills (W), and some items in self-recognition (R).
He had been dependent on his aged father to pick him up when he had consultations with his doctor and when he attended the daycare services. He began to get himself ready and go alone by bus. Moreover, he liked the status quo and disliked changes. He had no future goals at first, but then he began to look forward to going to the workplace.
Here, we compared the individual in case D with a woman in the conventional treatment group (non-SST group) who was 33 years old. Her DSDT score did not improve, but her SDSS score and LASMI score improved slightly as time passed. She had no children and had been a housewife for a long time. Because she suffered from auditory hallucinations and conflict with work peers, she quit her part-time job at a supermarket. She had few friends and secluded herself in her house. Her auditory hallucinations improved with increased dosage of RIS. There were a few social changes, but she was able to have a stable family life with her husband. She was essentially sensitive to her change in physical condition. It is possible that because she quit her job and she did not need to make cumbersome associations with her work peers, her physical condition and fatigue improved, so she became well and her SDSS score improved.
In the DSDT, individuals with mental illness need to ignore noticeable stimuli, focus on target stimuli, and memorize and dictate displayed numbers. This test is used for testing selective attention and verbal working memory [
The DSDT score showed significant improvement in the SST group at the 12th and 18th months (
It has been reported that cases with selective attention dysfunction have nonintegrated symptoms like serious thinking disorder [
In the cases described above, SST enabled individuals with schizophrenia to acquire these skills and enhanced their social life. In parallel with these social improvements, DSDT improvements were obtained. When selective attention or working memory is disturbed, problems arise in actions of daily life, for example, when speaking with someone in a noisy environment and working recalling requests that someone asked just before. This study showed that SST might not only enable individuals with schizophrenia to acquire the skills needed directly for their social life, but also to enhance their selective attention and working memory through learned behaviors [27,28].
Because cognitive function is not a direct target of SST, there is no research on interventions that treat cognitive function as direct outcome indices. A metanalysis by Kurtz et al. do not deal with cognitive function and neither do other metanalyses dealing with SST [
Ikebuchi et al. performed a total of 20 interventions that combined SST and psycho education in order to improve cognition in schizophrenia, and compared 3 groups (intervention-atypical psychotropics group, interventionconventional psychotropics group, and non-interventionatypical psychotropics group) using a quasi-experimental design. The cognitive function test, the digit span of WAIS-R, Trail Making test A and B, and word fluency and concepts fluency test were used. Attention function, which was evaluated by the digit span, showed significant improvement in the 2 groups using atypical psychotropics, but cognitive function was not improved by the intervention [
Granholm et al. [
As mentioned above, there has been no report in the improvement of cognitive function by direct SST effect. Therefore, although the number of cases was small in our study, we showed the possibility of improved cognitive function by using learning experiences that need attention, working memory, and improvement of social life.
The SDSS score improved first, and a few items of LASMI improved later. By SST, improvement of subjective feeling of health and part of cognitive function led to, or maintained, an improvement of social function. The reasons why the subjective rating scales, such as SF36 and JSQLS, did not improve are as follows: 1) In the SST group, as 2 cases described above, although social life improved as time passed, subjective evaluation did not improve because of the increase in social stimuli and stress; 2) Because awareness of reality was improved according to the improvement of the cognitive function and neurologic manifestation, subjective evaluation became low. In fact, some previous studies have shown that there is no correlation between subjective QOL evaluation and objective QOL evaluation in schizophrenia [
The limitation of this study is that the number of cases was small. As a result, there were only a few items that differed significantly. This is because the statistical power of the test may have been limited. There remains room for further investigation to clarify the results of this study.
The authors wish to thank all the staff in the PPST group and individuals with schizophrenia who cooperatively participated in this study.