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Journal Article

Citation

Madathumkovilakath NB, Kizhakkeppattu S, Thekekunnath S, Kazhungil F. Asian J. Psychiatry 2018; 35: 29-33.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, Government Medical College, Kozhikode, Kerala, India. Electronic address: drfirozk@gmail.com.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ajp.2018.04.032

PMID

29751218

Abstract

Aggression is one of the chief determinants of caregiver burden in severe mental illnesses. Clinical and treatment implications of aggression in mental illness are predominantly studied in perspectives of mental health care professionals. Coping style of caregivers towards aggression of persons with mental illness is understudied. So we studied coping strategies used by caregivers of patients with severe mental illness towards aggressive behaviors of patients and relationship between aggressive behavior and coping strategies. We assessed two hundreds and seventy caregivers of patients with severe mental illness attending outpatient psychiatry department using Modified Overt Aggression Scale and the Ways of Coping Scale - revised. 95.6% of the caregivers perceived verbal aggression followed by aggression against property (67%), auto aggression (33.7%) and physical aggression (25.6%). The study revealed that adaptive coping strategies - planful problem solving and seeking social support were used by 40% each of caregivers to deal with aggressive behavior. Only 4.4% of caregivers resorted to escape avoidance which is maladaptive coping strategy. Though adaptive strategies were used by caregivers these were not used in appropriate situations. Physical aggression and aggression against property were not significantly associated with planful problem solving (r = 0.105; p = 0.08 and r = 0.110; p = 0.07 respectively). But verbal aggression, aggression against property and physical aggression were associated with escape avoidance (r = 0.152; p = 0.01 and r = 0.168; p = 0.01 and r = 0.23; p = <0.001 respectively). The study found that coping towards aggression in caregivers of severe mental illnesses are predominantly maladaptive. Coping skills training would play a major role to address this issue.

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Aggression; Caregiver; Coping; Mental illness

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