Breaking a cycle of hospitalization through the psychiatric house call. 1976

S Matta, and M T Mulhare

The authors discuss a case in which family therapy administered in a home setting helped to break a cycle of psychiatric hospitalization that had continued for ten years. Their patient had adopted a persistent behavioral pattern involving protective magic rituals and consultations with spirits as a defense against other problems in her family relationships. With regular visits from the therapists and cooperation from each member of the family, the patient's symptoms were ameliorated and the family situation greatly improved after eight months. The authors believe that because they worked with the entire family as a system, were able to recognize sociocultural factors that had not been dealt with in the patient's hospitalizations, and were able to stimulate communication among family members in a home setting, they were able to see more immediate results and thus were able to break the costly cycle of repeated hospitalizations.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D008875 Middle Aged An adult aged 45 - 64 years. Middle Age
D010359 Patient Readmission Subsequent admissions of a patient to a hospital or other health care institution for treatment. Hospital Readmission,Rehospitalization,Unplanned Hospital Readmissions,Unplanned Readmission,30 Day Readmission,Hospital Readmissions,Readmission, Hospital,Readmissions, Hospital,Thirty Day Readmission,30 Day Readmissions,Hospital Readmission, Unplanned,Hospital Readmissions, Unplanned,Readmission, Patient,Readmission, Thirty Day,Readmission, Unplanned,Rehospitalizations,Thirty Day Readmissions,Unplanned Hospital Readmission,Unplanned Readmissions
D005196 Family Therapy A form of group psychotherapy. It involves treatment of more than one member of the family simultaneously in the same session. Therapy, Family,Family Therapies,Therapies, Family
D006792 House Calls Visits to the patient's home by professional personnel for the purpose of diagnosis and/or treatment. Home Visits,Call, House,Calls, House,Home Visit,House Call,Visit, Home,Visits, Home
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D012563 Schizophrenia, Paranoid A chronic form of schizophrenia characterized primarily by the presence of persecutory or grandiose delusions, often associated with hallucination. Delusional Disorder,Paranoid Schizophrenia,Delusional Disorders,Disorder, Delusional,Disorders, Delusional,Paranoid Schizophrenias,Schizophrenias, Paranoid

Related Publications

S Matta, and M T Mulhare
May 1978, The American journal of psychiatry,
S Matta, and M T Mulhare
January 1998, Continuum (Society for Social Work Administrators in Health Care),
S Matta, and M T Mulhare
November 1991, Canadian journal of psychiatry. Revue canadienne de psychiatrie,
S Matta, and M T Mulhare
April 1989, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne,
S Matta, and M T Mulhare
January 2013, The journal of behavioral health services & research,
S Matta, and M T Mulhare
June 1995, The Western journal of medicine,
S Matta, and M T Mulhare
September 2013, The New Zealand medical journal,
S Matta, and M T Mulhare
January 2020, The Permanente journal,
S Matta, and M T Mulhare
October 2023, Journal of general internal medicine,
Copied contents to your clipboard!