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'Avatar Therapy' Shows Promise in Treatment of Schizophrenia


FILE - A Kashmiri patient suffering from symptoms of schizophrenia lies on a bed and periodically shouts to medical staff after being brought by relatives to the casualty ward at the Psychiatric Diseases hospital in Srinagar, Nov. 20, 2015.
FILE - A Kashmiri patient suffering from symptoms of schizophrenia lies on a bed and periodically shouts to medical staff after being brought by relatives to the casualty ward at the Psychiatric Diseases hospital in Srinagar, Nov. 20, 2015.

An experimental therapy for people with schizophrenia that brings them face to face with a computer avatar representing the tormenting voices in their heads has proved promising in early trials.

Scientists who conducted a randomized controlled trial comparing the avatar therapy to a form of supportive counseling found that after 12 weeks, the avatars were more effective at reducing auditory hallucinations, or voices inside the head.

More research is needed to investigate the approach in other health care settings, so the therapy is not yet widely available.

But if further trials prove successful, experts said, avatar therapy could “radically change” treatment approaches for millions of psychosis sufferers across the world.

Schizophrenia is a psychiatric disorder that affects about one in 100 people worldwide. Its most common symptoms are delusions and auditory hallucinations.

These voices are typically insulting, tormenting and threatening, causing much distress and anxiety in patients. Drug treatments can reduce symptoms in most patients, but about one in four continue to be affected by hallucinations.

This study, published in The Lancet Psychiatry, involved 150 patients in Britain who had had schizophrenia for about 20 years and who had been experiencing persistent and distressing auditory hallucinations for more than a year.

Of these, 75 were given avatar therapy and 75 had a form of supportive counseling. They all continued with their usual antipsychotic medication throughout the trial.

Weekly sessions

The avatar therapy was given in 50-minute sessions delivered once a week over six weeks. Before starting treatment, patients worked with a therapist to create a computerized simulation, or avatar, of the voice they most wanted to quiet — including what the voice said, how it sounded and how it might look.

Tom Craig, a professor who led the study at Britain’s Maudsley Hospital and King’s College London’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, said the results provided “early evidence that avatar therapy rapidly improves auditory hallucinations.”

“So far, these improvements appear to last for up to six months for these patients,” he said. “However ... more research is needed to optimize the way the treatment is delivered and demonstrate that it is effective in other ... settings.”

Ann Mills-Duggan, a expert from the Wellcome Trust health charity, which funded the trial, said the results were very encouraging: “If the researchers can show that this therapy can be delivered effectively by different therapists in different locations, this approach could radically change how millions of psychosis sufferers are treated across the world.”

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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