Complex psychosis is a clinically relevant rehabilitation construct rather than a formal diagnostic category and refers to psychotic illness associated with treatment-resistant symptoms, functional impairment, and additional cognitive, psychiatric, neurodevelopmental, or physical health complexity. In this clinician-oriented narrative review, we synthesised current evidence on rehabilitation interventions for adults with complex psychosis, integrating direct evidence from specialist rehabilitation settings with indirect evidence from schizophrenia-spectrum studies when clinically informative. We searched major clinical databases, prioritised guidelines, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and controlled studies, and organised the synthesis by functional domain and pathway relevance. Evidence was strongest for cognitive remediation, particularly when combined with broader psychiatric rehabilitation or vocational support, for family interventions in relapse prevention, and for individual placement and support in competitive employment. Social–cognitive and metacognitive interventions appear clinically valuable, although transfer to real-world functioning is more variable. Community-based rehabilitation, supported accommodation, illness self-management, and ecological adaptation strategies remain central to functional recovery when embedded within multidisciplinary pathways. Digital and virtual interventions are promising adjuncts, but their efficacy remains heterogeneous and implementation challenges include engagement, privacy, and service integration. Overall, rehabilitation in complex psychosis is most convincing when it is personalised, measurement-based, and delivered through integrated service models linking assessment, intervention selection, supported living, and recovery-oriented care.
Pinzi, M., Fagiolini, A., Gualtieri, G., Rescalli, M.B., Pierini, C., Santangelo, A., et al. (2026). Rehabilitation in adults with complex psychosis: a clinician-oriented narrative review of multidimensional approaches to functional recovery. MEDICINA, 62(5) [10.3390/medicina62050841].
Rehabilitation in adults with complex psychosis: a clinician-oriented narrative review of multidimensional approaches to functional recovery
Pinzi, Mario;Fagiolini, Andrea
;Gualtieri, Giacomo;Rescalli, Maria Beatrice;Pierini, Caterina;Santangelo, Alessia;Patrizio, Benjamin;Cuomo, Alessandro
2026-01-01
Abstract
Complex psychosis is a clinically relevant rehabilitation construct rather than a formal diagnostic category and refers to psychotic illness associated with treatment-resistant symptoms, functional impairment, and additional cognitive, psychiatric, neurodevelopmental, or physical health complexity. In this clinician-oriented narrative review, we synthesised current evidence on rehabilitation interventions for adults with complex psychosis, integrating direct evidence from specialist rehabilitation settings with indirect evidence from schizophrenia-spectrum studies when clinically informative. We searched major clinical databases, prioritised guidelines, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and controlled studies, and organised the synthesis by functional domain and pathway relevance. Evidence was strongest for cognitive remediation, particularly when combined with broader psychiatric rehabilitation or vocational support, for family interventions in relapse prevention, and for individual placement and support in competitive employment. Social–cognitive and metacognitive interventions appear clinically valuable, although transfer to real-world functioning is more variable. Community-based rehabilitation, supported accommodation, illness self-management, and ecological adaptation strategies remain central to functional recovery when embedded within multidisciplinary pathways. Digital and virtual interventions are promising adjuncts, but their efficacy remains heterogeneous and implementation challenges include engagement, privacy, and service integration. Overall, rehabilitation in complex psychosis is most convincing when it is personalised, measurement-based, and delivered through integrated service models linking assessment, intervention selection, supported living, and recovery-oriented care.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Rehabilitation in Adults with Complex Psychosis-Pinzi-2026.pdf
accesso aperto
Descrizione: Articolo
Tipologia:
PDF editoriale
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
905.37 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
905.37 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/11365/1318597
