ISSN: 2329-6879

Medicina Ocupacional e Assuntos de Saúde

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Abstrato

Factors that Affect Occupational Status and Psychological Assessment

William Jose

People with recent onset psychosis often want to work or study. Although it has been suggested that cognitive deficits have an impact on occupational outcomes, few studies have examined the possibility that cognitive deficits alone can predict occupational outcomes when other significant determinants, such as self-esteem, motivation, the amount of time spent away from work or school, job/school search behaviors, subjective cognitive complaints, and psychotic symptoms, are taken into account. Consequently, this longitudinal review meant to assess the job of perception, as well as other key variables pertinent to word related result, to foresee word related status a half year after pattern in individuals with later beginning psychosis. The study included 27 people who were receiving treatment in rehabilitation programs. Neuropsychological, mental, clinical and word related measures were directed at standard, and word related status was gathered a half year after the fact. Ordinal relapse showed that functioning memory and time allotment missing from work/school at standard anticipated 48.1% of the change.